| Literature DB >> 27588210 |
Ernest A Azzopardi1, R Steven Conlan2, Iain S Whitaker1.
Abstract
Polymer therapeutics is a successful branch of nanomedicine, which is now established in several facets of everyday practice. However, to our knowledge, no literature regarding the application of the underpinning principles, general safety, and potential of this versatile class to the perioperative patient has been published. This study provides an overview of polymer therapeutics applied to clinical surgery, including the evolution of this demand-oriented scientific field, cutting-edge concepts, its implications, and limitations, illustrated by products already in clinical use and promising ones in development. In particular, the effect of design of polymer therapeutics on biophysical and biochemical properties, the potential for targeted delivery, smart release, and safety are addressed. Emphasis is made on principles, giving examples in salient areas of demand in current surgical practice. Exposure of the practising surgeon to this versatile class is crucial to evaluate and maximise the benefits that this established field presents and to attract a new generation of clinician-scientists with the necessary knowledge mix to drive highly successful innovation.Entities:
Keywords: nanomedicine; nanotechnology; polymer
Year: 2016 PMID: 27588210 PMCID: PMC4985703 DOI: 10.1002/jin2.6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interdiscip Nanomed ISSN: 2058-3273
Figure 1The five main subdisciplines of nanomedicine (European forward look consensus conference, 2004, and the relationship of polymer therapeutics to these subdisciplines).
Figure 2Diagrammatic representation of different types of polymer therapeutics. The presence of a water‐soluble polymer is the common denominator. Examples are given in parentheses. (a) Polymeric drug; (b) polymeric drug modified by the addition of pendant groups; (c) polymer–protein conjugate; (d) polymer–drug conjugate; and (e) PEGylated micelles.
Classification of polymers and prominent examples in clinical use.
| Classification | Subclasses | Polymer example | Clinical example | Surgical specialty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biodegradability | Nonbiodegradable | PEG | PEG recombinant | Gastrointestinal |
| IFN α2b (hepatitis C) | Hepatobiliary | |||
| PEG‐IFNα‐2b | Melanoma surgery | |||
| Biodegradable | HA | Dermal fillers (aesthetic surgery) | Aesthetic (Bray et al., | |
| Orthopaedic (Duncan and Vicent, | ||||
| Monomer | Homopolymer | PEG | PEG–doxorubicin (ovarian cancer) | Gynaecology |
| Pelvic | ||||
| PEG‐Erythropoietin | Anaemia (Duncan and Vicent, | |||
| PEG‐anti‐TNF Fab | Rheumatoid arthritis | |||
| Copolymer | Random amino acid copolymer | Glatiramer acetate (multiple sclerosis) | Neurosurgery | |
| Polyvinylpyrrolidone | Povidone iodide | Antiseptic (Ascher, Bayerl, Brun, et al., | ||
| Ubiquitous | ||||
| Dressings | ||||
| Hand scrub | ||||
| Shape (examples) | Linear | Dextrin | Dextrin | Nephrology |
| Branched | PEG (branched) | PEG‐IFN α2a (hepatitis C) | Gastrointestinal | |
| Hepatobiliary | ||||
| Dendrimeric | Lysine‐based dendrimer 7013 | 3% Carbopol formulation (intravaginal viricide versus HIV) | Obstetrics | |
| Gynaecology |
PEG, poly(ethyl glycol); HA, hyaluronic acid; IFN α2a, interferon alpha 2a; IFN α2b, interferon alpha 2b.
Glutamic acid, lysine, alanine, and tyrosine.
Examples of properties conferred by conjugation in polymer therapeutics.
| Polymer therapeutic | Conventional alternative |
|---|---|
| Improved biological efficacy (Duncan, | Conventional biologic efficacy |
| Extended plasma circulation time (Koburger, Hübner, Braun, et al., | Conventional plasma residence times, clearance, and degradation |
| Shielding from immunogenicity and premature biofouling and clearance (Werle and Bernkop‐Schnürch, | Conventional risk of immunological reaction, sequestration, and clearance |
| Enhanced permeability and retention effect (macromolecule) (Maeda, | Indiscriminate distribution (conventional small molecule) |
| Potential for “masking/unmasking” and locally triggered reinstatement of bioactivity (biodegradable polymers) | N/A |
Figure 3The polymer mask–unmask protein therapy principle. During transit, the polymer “masks” the bioactive from the body, at the same time shielding the body from potential toxicity. At the target site, the bioresponsive polymer is degraded (using various approaches) to release back the bioactive molecule, with its activity reinstated.
Examples of promising polymer therapeutics in development.
| Polymer | Polymer therapeutic | Examples and development |
|---|---|---|
| Dextran | 99Tc tilmanocept | Identification of sentinel lymph nodes in breast cancer and melanoma (phase III) |
| HPMA | HPMA–copolymer–diaminocyclohexyl (DACH) platinate | Malignant melanoma in phase 2 clinical trial (Maeda, Fang, Inutsuka, et al., |
| Succinoylated dextrin | Succinoylated dextrin–colistin | In vivo preclinical phase (Azzopardi et al., |
| Succinoylated dextrin‐recombinant EGF | In vivo preclinical phase (Duncan and Vicent, | |
| Succinoylated dextrin‐phospholipase‐A2 | In vitro breast cancer ( | |
| Poloxamer | Various | In vivo preclinical phase (Medina et al., |
HA, hyaluronic acid; HPMA, N‐(2‐hydroxypropyl) methacrylamide.
Examples of salient safety issues with particular polymers.
| Polymer | Polymer therapeutic |
|---|---|
| Nondegradable polymers | Theoretical risk of toxic accumulation in lysosomal storage‐like disorders |
| Dextrans | May generate an immunoglobulin‐M response (Azzopardi, Ferguson, and Thomas, |
| Degraded slowly (Azzopardi et al., | |
| Tend to form nondegradable products during chemical modification (Battisto and Pappas, | |
| HES | HES fractions may cause hypersensitivity and interfere with coagulation processes causing haemorrhage (Vercauteren, Bruneel, Schacht, et al., |
| Metabolites | As with all drugs, it should be ensured that the metabolites are assessed for any adverse/toxicological reaction (Duncan and Vicent, |
HES, hydroxyethyl starch.