| Literature DB >> 26690101 |
Sonja Dragojevic1, Jung Su Ryu2, Drazen Raucher3.
Abstract
The majority of anticancer drugs have poor aqueous solubility, produce adverse effects in healthy tissue, and thus impose major limitations on both clinical efficacy and therapeutic safety of cancer chemotherapy. To help circumvent problems associated with solubility, most cancer drugs are now formulated with co-solubilizers. However, these agents often also introduce severe side effects, thereby restricting effective treatment and patient quality of life. A promising approach to addressing problems in anticancer drug solubility and selectivity is their conjugation with polymeric carriers to form polymer-based prodrugs. These polymer-based prodrugs are macromolecular carriers, designed to increase the aqueous solubility of antitumor drugs, can enhance bioavailability. Additionally, polymer-based prodrugs approach exploits unique features of tumor physiology to passively facilitate intratumoral accumulation, and so improve chemodrug pharmacokinetics and pharmacological properties. This review introduces basic concepts of polymer-based prodrugs, provides an overview of currently emerging synthetic, natural, and genetically engineered polymers that now deliver anticancer drugs in preclinical or clinical trials, and highlights their major anticipated applications in anticancer therapies.Entities:
Keywords: anticancer drugs; cancer therapy; drug delivery; genetically engineered biopolymers; macromolecules; polymer based prodrugs; synthetic and natural polymers
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Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26690101 PMCID: PMC6331894 DOI: 10.3390/molecules201219804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Small molecule drugs are distributed not only in tumor tissue, but are also widely distributed in all healthy tissues, resulting in adverse side effects (left); The polymeric macromolecular carrier is designed to spare healthy tissue from toxicity by preferentially accumulating within tumors, primarily by exploiting their disorganized tumor vasculature and poor lymphatic drainage through the enhanced permeation and retention (EPR) effect (right).
Recent applications of synthetic polymers in prodrug delivery.
| Polymer | Application | (co)Polymer | Prodrug | Linker(bond) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEG | Gene delivery | Polyethylenimine(PEI)-PEG | cDNA of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene (HSVtk) and granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) | N.D. | [ |
| Tumor targeting | octreotide(Phe)-PEG | Paclitaxel | [ | ||
| Improved stability and intracellular drug release | methoxy PEG | Cis-aconityl-doxorubicin | [ | ||
| Tumor targeting | PEG | Fusion toxin consisting of the anti-EpCAM DARPin Ec1 and a domain I-deleted variant of ETA (ETA″) | rhinovirus 3C model protease—cleavage linker | [ | |
| Drug delivery | 3,3′-dithiodipropionic acid functionalized PEG- | Paclitaxel | Disulfide | [ | |
| Multidrug resistance | D-α-tocopherol PEG succinate (TPGS) | Paclitaxel | Disulfide | [ | |
| Improved the therapeutic efficacy | β-CD, PEG | Doxorubicin | hydrazone | [ | |
| Tumor targeting | PEG | Paclitaxel | [ | ||
| Multidrug resistance | PEG-poly( | 4-(N)-stearoyl Gemcitabine | [ | ||
| Theranosis | PEG-polylactic acid (PEG-PLA) l | Dicyanomethylene-4H-pyran-S-CPT | Disulfide | [ | |
| Tumor targeting | PEG monomethyl ether (mPEG) | Artesunate | Ester | [ | |
| Tumor targeting | PEG monomethyl ether | Camptothecin | Disulfide | [ | |
| Tumor targeting | PEG | Camptothecin | Disulfide | [ | |
| Tumor targeting | PEG2000 | Paclitaxel | MMP2-cleavable linker | [ | |
| Nanogel | PLGA-PEG-PLGA | PEGylated Taxol | [ | ||
| Drug delivery | mPEG- | Doxorubicin | Hydrazone | [ | |
| HPMA | improving anticancer therapy | (mPEG5000- | Doxorubicin-glucuronide prodrug (DOX-propGA3) | Glucuronide (β-glucuronidase cleavable linker) | [ |
| Prevent metastasis | HPMA copolymer | E-selectin binding peptide (Esbp)-doxorubicinor (KLAKLAK)2 | [ | ||
| Drug delivery | HPMA copolymer | H1-S6A, F8A peptide | GFLG (Cathepsin cleavage linker) | [ | |
| Tumor targeting | HPMA copolymer | Doxorubicin | GFLG and MMP cleavable linker | [ | |
| Improved the therapeutic efficacy | HPMA copolymer | Doxorubicin, 5-FU | Hydrazone, GFLG | [ | |
| Theranosis | Star polymer: poly(amido amine) (PAMAM) dendrimers and HPMA | Doxorubicin or TAMRA fluorescent dye | Hydrazone | [ | |
| Improved Bioavailability | Star polymer: poly(amido amine) (PAMAM) dendrimers and HPMA | Pirarubicin | Hydrazone | [ | |
| Drug delivery | HPMA copolymer | Iodine-125 | Hydrazone | [ | |
| Drug delivery | HPMA copolymer | Paclitaxel, Gemcitabine | GFLG | [ | |
| Drug delivery | Starch + HPMA copolymer | Camptothecin | [ | ||
| Gene delivery | galactosylated 2-hydroxypropylmethacrylamide- | shRNA | [ | ||
| Drug delivery | HPMA | Indium-111, Yttrium-90 | [ | ||
| Improved the therapeutic efficacy | multiblock poly HPMA | Gemcitabine, Paclitaxel and Doxorubicin | GFLG | [ | |
| Theranosis | HPMA copolymer | Zinc protoporphyrin | [ | ||
| SMA | Photodynamic therapy | SMA | Zinc protoporphyrin | Amide | [ |
| PLGA | Improved Bioavailability | PLGA | Gemcitabine | Amide | [ |
| PGG | Improved Bioavailability | PGG | Paclitaxel | Glutamic acid | [ |
Figure 2Structure of polyethylene glycol (PEG) and its drug conjugation.
Figure 3Structure of N-(2-hydroxypropyl) Methacrylamide (HPMA) and its drug conjugation.
Figure 4Structure of Poly (styrene-co-maleic acid/anhydride) (SMA) and its drug conjugation [61].
Figure 5Structure of PGA and its drug conjugation.
Figure 6Structure of PLGA and its drug conjugation.
Figure 7Chitosan structure, composed of deacetylated β-(1-4)-linked d-glucosamine units and of acetylated N-acetyl-d-glucosamine units.
Figure 8Dextran structure, composed of glucose molecules forming a complex branched glucan chain.
Current clinical trials of investigational anticancer drugs based on polymer.
| Polymer | Name | Drug | Status | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dextran | OsteoDex | Alendronate | Phase I | [ |
| Somadex | Somatostatin | Phase I | [ | |
| PEG | NK105 | Paclitaxel | Phase III | [ |
| NK102 | SN-38 | Phase II | [ | |
| NC-6004 | Cisplatin | Phase III | [ | |
| NC-4016 | Dachplatin | Phase I | [ | |
| NC-6300 | Doxorubicin | Phase I | [ | |
| poly- | paclitaxel poliglumex, CT-2103 | Paclitaxel | Phase III | [ |
| Cyclodextrin-PEG copolymer | CRLX101 | Camptothecin | Phase II | [ |
Figure 9Pullulan structure, composed of maltotriose units.
Figure 10Schematic presentation of Elastin like polypeptide (ELP) polymeric prodrug. Construct consists of (1) Cell penetrating peptide, mediating uptake of ELP in tissues and cancer cells; (2) ELP, thermally responsive biopolymer which can be actively targeted to tumor tissue by external application of mild heat; (3) cleavable linker, releases anticancer agent in tumor tissues and cancer cells, and (4) anticancer agent.