| Literature DB >> 28946666 |
Ayesha Manzur1, Adeolu Oluwasanmi2, Darren Moss3, Anthony Curtis4, Clare Hoskins5.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer has been classified as a cancer of unmet need. After diagnosis the patient prognosis is dismal with few surviving over 5 years. Treatment regimes are highly patient variable and often the patients are too sick to undergo surgical resection or chemotherapy. These chemotherapies are not effective often because patients are diagnosed at late stages and tumour metastasis has occurred. Nanotechnology can be used in order to formulate potent anticancer agents to improve their physicochemical properties such as poor aqueous solubility or prolong circulation times after administration resulting in improved efficacy. Studies have reported the use of nanotechnologies to improve the efficacy of gemcitabine (the current first line treatment) as well as investigating the potential of using other drug molecules which have previously shown promise but were unable to be utilised due to the inability to administer through appropriate routes-often related to solubility. Of the nanotechnologies reported, many can offer site specific targeting to the site of action as well as a plethora of other multifunctional properties such as image guidance and controlled release. This review focuses on the use of the major nanotechnologies both under pre-clinical development and those which have recently been approved for use in pancreatic cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: drug delivery; nanomedicine; nanoparticle; pancreatic cancer; theranostic
Year: 2017 PMID: 28946666 PMCID: PMC5750645 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics9040039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Chemical structure of (A) gemcitabine and (B) 5-fluorouracil.
Nanoparticle based drug delivery systems for PC therapy.
| Type of Nano-System | Name of Nano-System | Drug Formulated | Testing Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polymer-drug conjugate | Poly(ethylene glycol)-P(HEMASN38) | SN38 | Preclinical: In vivo | [ |
| Poly (TPGS)-PEG-GEM | Gemcitabine | Preclinical: In vitro | [ | |
| Methacrylate-based GEM-monomer conjugate 3 | Gemcitabine | Preclinical: In vitro | [ | |
| Poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(2-methyl-2-carboxyl-propylenecarbonate)-graft-dodecanol-graft-cationic ligand | Gemcitabine | Preclinical: In vivo | [ | |
| Block copolymer | Styrene-maleic acid | CDF | Preclinical: In vitro | [ |
| Poly(ethylene glycol)- | Oxaliplatin | Preclinical: In vivo | [ | |
| Mixed micelles | Poly(vinyl pyrrolidone-b-polycaprolactone) (PVP- | Gemcitabine, doxorubicin, doxorubicin hydrochloride, 5-fluorouricil and paclitaxel | Preclinical: In vitro | [ |
| Graft polymer | Poly(allylamine)- | BNIPDAoct | Preclinical: In vivo | [ |
| Dendrimer | PAMAM—hyaluronic acid | CDF | Preclinical: In vitro | [ |
| Poly(ethylene glycol)—PAMAM—poly(ethylene glycol)-Flt-2 | Gemcitabine Hydrochloride | Preclinical: In vivo | [ | |
| Thermo-responsive polymer | Poly(diEGMAco-OEGMA300)- | Squalenoyl-gemcitabine | Preclinical: In vitro | [ |
| pH-responsive polymer | Poly(styrene-alt-maleic anhydride) | Curcumin | Preclinical: In vitro | [ |
| Ultrasound-responsive nano-emulsion | PEG-PLLA | Paclitaxel | Preclinical: In vivo | [ |
| Albumin | Abraxane® | Paclitaxel | FDA approved 2013 | [ |
| Abraxane®/Gemcitabine | Paclitaxel & gemcitabine | Phase III | [ | |
| Inorganic nanoparticle | Iron oxide-dextran-DOX | Doxorubicin | Preclinical: In vitro | [ |
| Iron oxide-antiCD47-GEM | Gemcitabine | Preclinical: In vitro | [ | |
| Iron oxide-gold | BNIPDSpm | Preclinical: In vivo | [ | |
| Iron oxide-gold-GEM | Gemcitabine | Preclinical: In vivo | [ | |
Figure 2Schematic representation of a polymer drug conjugate.
Figure 3Chemical structure of tocopherol poly(ethylene glycol) succinate 1000-gemcitabine polymer drug conjugate.
Figure 4Schematic representation of amphiphilic polymer architectures: (A) Block copolymer; (B) Graft polymer and (C) Dendrimer.
Figure 5Chemical structure of (A) poly(allylamine)-cholesterol and (B) bisnaphthalimido propyldiaamino octane.
Figure 6Schematic representation of inorganic nanoparticles: (A) Carbon nanotube; (B) Quantum dot; (C) Iron oxide; (D) gold and (E) iron oxide-gold.
Figure 7Schematic representation of hybrid nanoparticle with gemcitabine coupled onto its surface via a Diels Alder cycloadduct and its subsequent retro Diels Alder reaction after heating, liberating free gemcitabine.