| Literature DB >> 31938069 |
Mengnan Zhao1, Demian van Straten2, Marike L D Broekman3, Véronique Préat1, Raymond M Schiffelers2.
Abstract
The current achievements in treating glioblastoma (GBM) patients are not sufficient because many challenges exist, such as tumor heterogeneity, the blood brain barrier, glioma stem cells, drug efflux pumps and DNA damage repair mechanisms. Drug combination therapies have shown increasing benefits against those challenges. With the help of nanocarriers, enhancement of the efficacy and safety could be gained using synergistic combinations of different therapeutic agents. In this review, we will discuss the major issues for GBM treatment, the rationales of drug combinations with or without nanocarriers and the principle of enhanced permeability and retention effect involved in nanomedicine-based tumor targeting and promising nanodiagnostics or -therapeutics. We will also summarize the recent progress and discuss the clinical perspectives of nanocarrier-based combination therapies. The goal of this article was to provide better understanding and key considerations to develop new nanomedicine combinations and nanotheranostics options to fight against GBM. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: EPR effect; glioblastoma; local delivery; nanomedicine; nanoparticles; systemic delivery; theranostics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31938069 PMCID: PMC6956816 DOI: 10.7150/thno.38147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Figure 1Evolution of FDA-approved GBM treatment approaches.
Rationale of nanocarrier-based combination therapy against GBM
| Issues with | Advantages of | Advantages of nanocarrier-based drug delivery | Advantages of nanocarrier-based combination therapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| • Tumor heterogeneity | • Combination of drugs with different mechanisms of action | • Drug encapsulation and solubilization | • Combination of drug with different properties (solubility, BBB permeability, pharmacokinetics) |
Figure 2Heterogeneous disruption in GBM. Significant BBB breakdown seen in the bulk tumor region (left panel) allows nanoparticle extravasation. Regions with infiltrating GBM and GSC cells show less or no breakdown of the BBB (middle and right) preventing NPs or other therapeutics to reach these cells.
Recent clinical trials of drug combination for GBM treatment
| Drugs | Mechanism of action | Condition | Phase/Status | Major findings | Clinical trial ID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bevacizumab; | Anti-VEGF antibody; | Recurrent Gliomas | phase II/Completed in 2013 | No results found | NCT00921167 |
| O6-Benzylguanine; Temozolomide | O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase inhibitor; | Temozolomide- resistant malignant glioma | phase II/Completed in 2008 | No results found | NCT00613093 |
| Imatinib; | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor; ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase inhibitor | Recurrent/ progressive grade II low-grade Glioma | phase II/Completed in 2012 | Groups: patients with astrocytoma or oligodendroglioma; 12-month PFS:44% and 34% respectively | NCT00615927 |
| Cediranib; | Tyrosine kinase; | Recurrent GBM | Phase III/Completed in 2016 | Groups: patients received cediranib alone, lomustine alone or drug combination; PFS: 92, 125 and 82 days respectively | NCT00777153 |
| Erlotinib; | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/Terminated in 2014 (Unanticipated Toxicities) | No results found | NCT01110876 |
| Sorafenib; | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor; | Recurrent GBM | Phase I/II/Completed in 2013 | Groups: patients not undergoing surgery or received anti-VEGF therapy; 6-month PFS: 17% and 10% respectively | NCT00329719 |
| Bevacizumab; | Anti-VEGF antibody; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/Completed in 2014 | Groups: patients received sorafenib high dose or low dose; 6-month PFS: 26% and 17% respectively | NCT00621686 |
| Bevacizumab; | Anti-VEGF antibody; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/Completed in 2010 | No results found | NCT00800917 |
| Erlotinib; | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/Completed in 2009 | Group: patients received erlotinib and sirolimus; 6-month PFS: 3% | NCT00672243 |
| Vorinostat; | Deacetylase inhibitor; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/ Completed in 2010 | Groups: patients not undergoing surgery or undergoing surgery; 6-month PFS: 0 and 29% respectively | NCT00641706 |
| Bevacizumab; | Anti-VEGF antibody; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/ Completed in 2010 | Groups: patients with grade III or grade IV malignant glioma; 6-month PFS:44% and 29% respectively | NCT00671970 |
| Temozolomide; | Alkylating agent; | Recurrent GBM | Phase II/ Recruiting | No results found | NCT02340156 |
| Glasdegib; | Inhibits SHH pathway interfering with cancer stem cells and endothelial migration; | Newly diagnosed GBM | Phase IB/II/ Recruiting | No results found | NCT03466450 |
| Bortezomib; | Deplete the MGMT enzyme; | Recurrent GBM with unmethylated MGMT promoter | Phase IB/II/ Recruiting | No results found | NCT03643549 |
| Bevacizumab; | Anti-VEGF antibody; | Recurrent GBM | Phase I/ Recruiting | No results found | NCT02669173 |
Figure 3The EPR effect is influenced by stromal parameters such as dense extracellular matrix (A), hypercellularity (B), hypoxia (C) and high interstitial fluid pressure (D). At blood vessel level (insert), heterogeneity in vascular permeability, tight junction expression (E) and pericyte coverage (F) result in varying clinical manifestations of EPR.
Figure 4(A) and (B): Radioactive [64Cu]CLS/ZnS QDs as PET/self-illuminating luminescence imaging agents show promising in vivo visualization possibilities. Adapted with permission from 120, copyright 2014 American chemical society.
Figure 5(A) and (B) Using an exogenous magnetic field to target liposomes loaded with multiple imaging agents and therapeutic drugs to an intracranial tumor. The integrated QDs can be used for fluorescence guided resection. Adapted with permission from 123, copyright 2018 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.