| Literature DB >> 28346375 |
Upendra Bulbake1, Sindhu Doppalapudi2, Nagavendra Kommineni3, Wahid Khan4.
Abstract
Liposomes are the first nano drug delivery systems that have been successfully translated into real-time clinical applications. These closed bilayer phospholipid vesicles have witnessed many technical advances in recent years since their first development in 1965. Delivery of therapeutics by liposomes alters their biodistribution profile, which further enhances the therapeutic index of various drugs. Extensive research is being carried out using these nano drug delivery systems in diverse areas including the delivery of anti-cancer, anti-fungal, anti-inflammatory drugs and therapeutic genes. The significant contribution of liposomes as drug delivery systems in the healthcare sector is known by many clinical products, e.g., Doxil®, Ambisome®, DepoDur™, etc. This review provides a detailed update on liposomal technologies e.g., DepoFoam™ Technology, Stealth technology, etc., the formulation aspects of clinically used products and ongoing clinical trials on liposomes.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials; drug delivery; liposome technology; liposomes; marketed products; nanotechnology; therapeutics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28346375 PMCID: PMC5489929 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics9020012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Schematic representation showing the advantages of formulating drugs in liposomes.
Figure 2Therapeutic areas covered by liposome-based products.
Figure 3Pharmacokinetics of PEGylated liposomes and Non-PEGylated liposomes.
Figure 4Spheroid and granular structure of a DepoFoam™ particle.
Clinically used liposome-based products.
| SN | Clinical Products (Approval Year) | Administration | Active Agent | Lipid/Lipid:Drug Molar Ratio | Indication | Company |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Doxil® (1995) | i.v. | Doxorubicin | HSPC:Cholesterol:PEG 2000-DSPE (56:39:5 molar ratio) | Ovarian, breast cancer, Kaposi’s sarcoma | Sequus Pharmaceuticals |
| 2. | DaunoXome® (1996) | i.v. | Daunorubicin | DSPC and Cholesterol (2:1 molar ratio) | AIDS-related Kaposi’s sarcoma | NeXstar Pharmaceuticals |
| 3. | Depocyt® (1999) | Spinal | Cytarabine/Ara-C | DOPC, DPPG, Cholesterol and Triolein | Neoplastic meningitis | SkyPharma Inc. |
| 4. | Myocet® (2000) | i.v. | Doxorubicin | EPC:Cholesterol (55:45 molar ratio) | Combination therapy with cyclophosphamide in metastatic breast cancer | Elan Pharmaceuticals |
| 5. | Mepact® (2004) | i.v. | Mifamurtide | DOPS:POPC (3:7 molar ratio) | High-grade, resectable, non-metastatic osteosarcoma | Takeda Pharmaceutical Limited |
| 6. | Marqibo® (2012) | i.v. | Vincristine | SM:Cholesterol (60:40 molar ratio) | Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia | Talon Therapeutics, Inc. |
| 7. | Onivyde™ (2015) | i.v. | Irinotecan | DSPC:MPEG-2000:DSPE (3:2:0.015 molar ratio) | Combination therapy with fluorouracil and leucovorin in metastatic adenocarcinoma of the pancreas | Merrimack Pharmaceuticals Inc. |
| 8. | Abelcet® (1995) | i.v. | Amphotericin B | DMPC:DMPG (7:3 molar ratio) | Invasive severe fungal infections | Sigma-Tau Pharmaceuticals |
| 9. | Ambisome® (1997) | i.v. | Amphotericin B | HSPC:DSPG:Cholesterol:Amphotericin B (2:0.8:1:0.4 molar ratio) | Presumed fungal infections | Astellas Pharma |
| 10. | Amphotec® (1996) | i.v. | Amphotericin B | Cholesteryl sulphate:Amphotericin B (1:1 molar ratio) | Severe fungal infections | Ben Venue Laboratories Inc. |
| 11. | Visudyne® (2000) | i.v. | Verteporphin | Verteporphin:DMPC and EPG (1:8 molar ratio) | Choroidal neovascularisation | Novartis |
| 12. | DepoDur™ (2004) | Epidural | Morphine sulfate | DOPC, DPPG, Cholesterol and Triolein | Pain management | SkyPharma Inc. |
| 13. | Exparel® (2011) | i.v. | Bupivacaine | DEPC, DPPG, Cholesterol and Tricaprylin | Pain management | Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. |
| 14. | Epaxal® (1993) | i.m. | Inactivated hepatitis A virus (strain RGSB) | DOPC:DOPE (75:25 molar ratio) | Hepatitis A | Crucell, Berna Biotech |
| 15. | Inflexal® V (1997) | i.m. | Inactivated hemaglutinine of Influenza virus strains A and B | DOPC:DOPE (75:25 molar ratio) | Influenza | Crucell, Berna Biotech |
i.v. (intravenous); i.m. (intramuscular); HSPC (hydrogenated soy phosphatidylcholine); PEG (polyethylene glycol); DSPE (distearoyl-sn-glycero-phosphoethanolamine); DSPC (distearoylphosphatidylcholine); DOPC (dioleoylphosphatidylcholine); DPPG (dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol); EPC (egg phosphatidylcholine); DOPS (dioleoylphosphatidylserine); POPC (palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine); SM (sphingomyelin); MPEG (methoxy polyethylene glycol); DMPC (dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine); DMPG (dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol); DSPG (distearoylphosphatidylglycerol); DEPC (dierucoylphosphatidylcholine); DOPE (dioleoly-sn-glycero-phophoethanolamine).
Figure 5Remote loading approach of DOX into the intraliposomal aqueous phase. Liposomes are prepared at the desired concentration of ammonium sulphate. The gradient was formed by removing the ammonium sulphate from the external liposome medium. Intraliposomal NH4+ dissociates into NH3 and H+, NH3 escape from the liposome and H+ is retained in the liposome water phase. DOX HCl is added to the liposome dispersion at a temperature above the phase transition of the liposomal lipids. DOX, a cationic amphiphile, is present in equilibrium between an ionised and a non-ionised form. The latter form commutes across the liposome bilayer and becomes ionised once exposed to the internal H+ environment, and forms a salt with the SO42− anions.
Figure 6Liposomes present under different phases of clinical trial investigation.
Liposomal formulations present in clinical trials.
| SN | Products | Administration | Active Agent | Lipid Composition | Indication | Company |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase III | ||||||
| 1. | Arikace | Aerosol delivery | Amikacin | DPPC and cholesterol | Lung infections | Transave Inc. |
| 2. | Stimuvax | s.c. | Tecemotide | Cholesterol, DMPG, DPPC | Non-small cell lung cancer | Oncothyreon Inc. |
| 3. | T4N5 liposomal lotion | Topical | T4 endonuclease V | Egg lecithin | Xeroderma pigmentosum | AGI Dermatics Inc. |
| 4. | Liprostin | i.v. | Prostaglandin E-1 (PGE-1) | Unknown | Restenosis after angioplasty | Endovasc Inc. |
| 5. | ThermoDox | i.v. | Doxorubicin | DPPC, Myristoyl stearyl phosphatidylcholine and DSPE- | Hepatocellular carcinoma and also recurring chest wall breast cancer | Celsion |
| 6. | Lipoplatin | i.v. | Cisplatin | DPPG, soy phosphatidyl choline, mPEG-distearoyl phosphatidylethanolamine lipid conjugate and cholesterol | Non-small cell lung cancer | Regulon Inc. |
| Phase II | ||||||
| 7. | Aroplatin | i.v. | Platinum analogue cis-(trans- R,R-1,2-diaminocyclohexane) bis (neodecanoato) platinum (II) | DMPC and DMPG | Metastatic colorectal cancer | Agenus Inc. |
| 8. | Liposomal annamycin | i.v. | Semi-synthetic doxorubicin analogue annamycin | DMPC and DMPG | Relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukaemia | Aronex Pharmaceuticals |
| 9. | SPI-077 | i.v. | Cisplatin | Soybean phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol | Lung, head and neck cancer | Alza Corporation |
| 10. | OSI-211 | i.v. | Lurtotecan | HSPC and cholesterol | Ovarian, head and neck cancer | OSI Pharmaceuticals |
| 11. | S-CKD602 | i.v. | Potent topoisomerase I inhibitor | Phospholipids covalently bound to mPEG | Cancer | Alza Corporation |
| 12. | LE-SN38 | i.v. | Irinotecan’s active metabolite | DOPC, cholesterol and cardiolipin | Advanced colorectal cancer | NeoPharm Labs Ltd. |
| 13. | LEP-ETU | i.v. | Paclitaxel | DOPC, cholesterol and cardiolipin | Cancer | NeoPharm Labs Ltd. |
| 14. | Endotag-I | i.v. | Paclitaxel | DOTAP: DOPC: Paclitaxel | Breast and pancreatic cancers | Medigene |
| 15. | Atragen | i.v. | All-trans retinoic acid | DMPC and soybean oil | Hormone-resistant prostate cancer, renal cell carcinoma and acute myelogenous leukaemia | Aronex Pharmaceuticals |
| Phase I | ||||||
| 16. | LEM-ETU | i.v. | Mitoxantrone | DOPC, cholesterol and cardiolipin | Various cancers | NeoPharm Labs Ltd. |
| 17. | Liposomal Grb-2 | i.v. | Antisense oligodeoxynucleotide growth factor receptor bound protein 2 (Grb-2) | Unknown | Hematologic malignancies | Bio-Path holdings |
| 18. | INX-0125 | i.v. | Vinorelbine tartrate | Cholesterol and sphingomyelin | Advanced solid tumours | Inex Pharmaceuticals |
| 19. | INX-0076 | i.v. | Topotecan | Cholesterol and sphingomyelin | Advanced solid tumours | Inex Pharmaceuticals |
| 20. | TKM-080301 | Hepatic intra-arterial administration | PLK1 siRNA | Unique LNP technology (formerly referred to as stable nucleic acid-lipid particles or SNALP) | Neuroendocrine tumours | Tekmira Pharmaceuticals |
| 21. | Atu027 | i.v. | PKN3 siRNA | AtuFECT01 | Pancreatic cancer | Silence Therapeutics |
| 22. | 2B3-101 | i.v. | Doxorubicin | Glutathione PEGylated liposomes | Solid tumours | 2-BBB therapeutic |
| 23. | MTL-CEBPA | i.v. | CEBPA siRNA | SMARTICLES® liposomal nanoparticles | Liver cancer | MiNA Therapeutics |
| 24. | ATI-1123 | i.v. | Docetaxel | Protein stabilizing liposomes (PSL™) | Solid tumours | Azaya therapeutic |
| 25. | LiPlaCis | i.v. | Cisplatin | The lipid composition of the LiPlasomes is tailored to be specifically sensitive to degradation by the sPLA2 enzyme | Advanced solid tumours | Oncology Venture |
| 26. | MCC-465 | i.v. | Doxorubicin | DPPC, cholesterol and maleimidated palmitoyl phosphatidyl ethanolamine; immunoliposomes tagged with PEG and the F(ab′)2 fragment of human monoclonal antibody GAH | Metastatic stomach cancer | Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation |
| 27. | SGT-53 | i.v. | p53 gene | Cationic lipids complexed with plasmid DNA encoding wild-type p53 tumour suppressor protein | Various solid tumours | SynerGene Therapeutics |
| 28. | Alocrest | i.v. | Vinorelbine | Sphingomyelin/cholesterol (OPTISOME™) | Breast and lung cancers | Spectrum Pharmaceuticals |
DMPG (Dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol); DPPC (Dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine); DPPG (Dipalmitoyl phosphatidylglycerol); DMPC (dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine); HSPC (hydrogenated soy phosphatidylcholine); PEG (polyethylene glycol); mPEG (methoxy polyethylene glycol); DOPC (dioleoylphosphatidylcholine); DSPE (distearoyl-sn-glycero-phosphoethanolamine); i.v. intravenous.