| Literature DB >> 30121385 |
Sebastian Kallus1, Bernhard Englinger2, Julia Senkiv3, Anna Laemmerer2, Petra Heffeter4, Walter Berger5, Christian R Kowol6, Bernhard K Keppler7.
Abstract
Fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitors like ponatinib and nintedanib are clinically approved for defined cancer patient cohorts but often exert dose-limiting adverse effects. Hence, we encapsulated the FGFR inhibitors ponatinib, PD173074, and nintedanib into polylactic acid nanoparticles and liposomes to enable increased tumor accumulation/specificity and reduce side effects. Different methods of drug loading were tested and the resulting formulations compared regarding average size distribution as well as encapsulation efficiency. Appropriate encapsulation levels were achieved for liposomal preparations only. Nanoencapsulation resulted in significantly decelerated uptake kinetics in vitro with clearly decreased short-term (up to 72 h) cytotoxicity at higher concentrations. However, in long-term clonogenic assays liposomal formations were equally or even more active as compared to the free drugs. Accordingly, in an FGFR inhibitor-sensitive murine osteosarcoma transplantation model (K7M2), only liposomal but not free ponatinib resulted in significant tumor growth inhibition (by 60.4%) at markedly reduced side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Drug delivery; FGFR inhibitors; Liposomes; Nanoencapsulation; Nintedanib; Ponatinib
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30121385 DOI: 10.1016/j.nano.2018.08.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomedicine ISSN: 1549-9634 Impact factor: 5.307