| Literature DB >> 31952210 |
Jonathan M Pantshwa1, Pierre P D Kondiah1, Yahya E Choonara1, Thashree Marimuthu1, Viness Pillay1.
Abstract
Despite advances achieved in medicine, chemotherapeutics still has detrimental side effects with ovarian cancer (OC), accounting for numerous deaths among females. The provision of safe, early detection and active treatment of OC remains a challenge, in spite of improvements in new antineoplastic discovery. Nanosystems have shown remarkable progress with impact in diagnosis and chemotherapy of various cancers, due to their ideal size; improved drug encapsulation within its interior core; potential to minimize drug degradation; improve in vivo drug release kinetics; and prolong blood circulation times. However, nanodrug delivery systems have few limitations regarding its accuracy of tumour targeting and the ability to provide sustained drug release. Hence, a cogent and strategic approach has focused on nanosystem functionalization with antibody-based ligands to selectively enhance cellular uptake of antineoplastics. Antibody functionalized nanosystems are (advanced) synthetic candidates, with a broad range of efficiency in specific tumour targeting, whilst leaving normal cells unaffected. This article comprehensively reviews the present status of nanosystems, with particular emphasis on nanomicelles for molecular diagnosis and treatment of OC. In addition, biomarkers of nanosystems provide important prospects as chemotherapeutic strategies to upsurge the survival rate of patients with OC.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapeutics; drug delivery; nanomicelles; nanosystems; ovarian cancer; tumour targeting
Year: 2020 PMID: 31952210 PMCID: PMC7017423 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12010213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Illustration of the expression of cancer-associated mucins, accompanying the development of ovarian cancer and the intraperitoneal implant treatment, providing targeted therapy within the peritoneal cavity (Adapted with permission from [21].
Outline of the distinguishable nanotherapeutic tools designed for ovarian cancer treatment [19].
| Nanosystems | Polymer–Drug Conjugates | Dendrimers | Polymer Micelles | Liposomes | Solid Lipid Nanoparticles |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size | ≤10 nm | 2–10 nm | 10–100 nm | 100–200 nm | 50–1000 nm |
| Structural characteristics | Macromolecular structure | Macromolecular Tree-like structure | Spherical Supramolecular | Spherical bilayer vesicle structure | Spherical, bilayer-nanocapsular structure |
| Carrier composition | Water-soluble polymer | Hyperbranched polymer chains | Amphiphilic di and tri-block copolymers | Phospholipid, cholesterol membrane lipids | Solid lipid emulsifier water |
| Drug incorporation strategy | Covalent conjugation requiring functional groups on drug and polymer | Covalent conjugation requiring functional groups on drug and polymer | Noncovalent encapsulation/compatible with hydrophobic drugs | Noncovalent encapsulation/compatible with hydrophilic drugs | Noncovalent encapsulation/compatible with hydrophilic drugs |
| PEG-paclitaxel & HPMA copolymer-doxorubicin—phase II trials | Dendrimer- docetaxel & Viva gel- phase II & III trials | CRLX- 101&NKTR-102- phase II/III clinical trials | SGT53-01& MCC- 46 phase I clinical trials | SLNs with [Gd-DTPA(H2O)]2− and [Gd-DOTA(H2O)]− compounds preclinical trials [ |
Figure 2Schematic depicting examples of nanosized delivery systems; (a) liposomes, (b) nanomicelles, (c,d) polymer–drug conjugates, and (e) dendrimers, which are currently explored in detail for transport of chemotherapeutic agents (adapted with permission from (a) Trucillo et al. [31], (b) Brandta et al. [51], (c,d) Tong et al. [52], (e) Huang &Wu [53].
Figure 3Schematic representation of the supramolecular structure of polymeric micelles (adapted with permission from Lu and Park [47]).
Figure 4Schematic depiction of surfactant molecules aligning on water/air interface at pre- and post-‘Critical Nanomicelle Concentration (CNC)’ threshold (adapted with permission from Mukherjee et al. [68]).
Building block copolymers employed in micelle drug transport nanosystems (adapted from Sutton et al., 2007) [69].
| Copolymers | Abbreviation | Repeating Unit Structure |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Poly (ethylene glycol) | PEG, PEO |
|
| Poly (N-vinyl pyrrolidone) | PVP |
|
| Poly (N-isopropyacrylamide | PNIPAM, NIPAM |
|
| Poly (N-vinyl alcohol) | PVA |
|
| Poly (N-(2-hydroxyproyl methacrylamide) | pHPMAm |
|
|
| ||
| Polyesters | ||
| Poly (propylene oxide) | PPO |
|
| Poly esters | ||
| Poly (L-lactide) | ||
| Poly (D,L-lactide) | PLA, PDLLA |
|
| Poly (lactide-co-gycolide) | PLGA |
|
| Poly (Ɛ-caprolactone) | PCL |
|
| Poly(β-amino ester) |
| |
| Poly(lactic acid) | PLA |
|
Figure 5Commonly employed methods of drug-loaded micelle preparation.
Polymeric micellar systems employed for treatment and diagnosis (adapted from Kedar et al. [80]; Chen et al. [81]).
| Polymer Structural Formula | Method of Synthesis | Method of Micellization | Delivered Agent | Mode of Delivery | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLGA-b-PPO-b-PLGA and PEG-b-PPO | Ring-opening polymerization | Dialysis method | Doxorubicin (DD) | P | [ |
| Poly(ε-caprolactone)-b-PEO | Anionic ring opening polymerization | Dialysis method | Pyrene (hydrophobic fluorescent probe) (DA) | P | [ |
| Poly(lactic acid)-polyurethane | Step condensation | Microphase separation method | Gliclazide (DD) | P | [ |
| PMPC-b-PBMA | RAFT technology | Self-emulsion evaporation method | Paclitaxel (DD) | P | [ |
| Poly(ethylene glycol-b-lactide) | Anionic ring opening polymerization | Oil-in-water emulsion method | Taxol (DD) | P | [ |
| Poly(lactide-b-PEG) | Solvent polymerization | Self-emulsion solvent evaporation method | Paclitaxel (DD) | P | [ |
| mPEG-b-p(HEMAm-Lacn) | Free-radical polymerization | Rapid heating procedure | Pyrene (DA) | P | [ |
| ϒ-Benzyl l-glutamate N- Carboxyanhydride | Polymerization | Dialysis | Adriamycin (DD) | P | [ |
| Acetal-PEG-b-PLA | Ring-opening polymerization | Dialysis method | Docetaxel, 125 I (DD), (DA) | Tyrosine-A, tyrosyl-glutmic acid-A | [ |
| COOH-PEG-b-PLGA | Polymerization | Dialysis method | Docetaxel, paclitaxel (DD) | RNA aptamer-A | [ |
| PEG-b-PCL | Free-radical polymerization | Dialysis method | Paclitaxel, rapamycin (DD) | Folate- A | [ |
| PEG-b-PLLA and P(HEMA)-b-p(His) | Solvent polymerization | Dialysis method | Doxorubicin (DD) | - | [ |
| P(HEMA)-b-p(His) | Solvent polymerization | Dialysis method | Doxorubicin(DD) | Folate-A | [ |
| PEG-b-PLA and HEMA-co-his)-g-PLA | Anionic ring opening polymerization | Oil-in-water emulsion method | Doxorubicin, Cy 5.5 (DD), (DA) | Folate-A | [ |
| PEG-b-PLA and P(NVI-co-NVP)-g-PLA | Anionic ring opening polymerization | Oil-in-water emulsion method | Doxorubicin, 123 I (DD), DA | Folate-A | [ |
| mPEG-b-PLA and P(NIPAAm-co-MAAc)-g-PLA | Solvent polymerization | Self-emulsion solvent evaporation method | Doxorubicin, FITC (DD), DA | Galactosamine-A | [ |
Abbreviations: P-passive targeting, A-active targeting, DD-Delivered Drug & DA-Delivered Agent.
Figure 6Schematic representation of drug loaded micelles (spheres) with imaging agents, from the administration site to the tumour tissue. After administration, micelles (10–200 nm) display specific targeting of tumour growth via passive targeting with cellular endocytotic uptake from exterior fluid to the cancer cells. Active targeting through receptor-mediated internalization is achieved by attachment of antibody ligand molecules, to the surface of micelles (Adapted with permission from Chen et al. [81]).
Figure 7Schematic depiction of (a) active targeting, (b–g) confocal images of A431 cellular uptake incubated with cetuximab encapsulated micelles and lysotracker. The fluorescence intensity of A431 cells (b–d) treated with targeting micelles was 1.45 times higher than in cells incubated with antibody-free micelles (e–g) (Adapted with permission from Sudimack et al. [117]; Liao et al. [118].
Polymeric micelle-based formulations containing chemotherapeutic drugs in clinical trials.
| Formulation Trade Name | Incorporated Drug | Purpose | Polymer | Particle Size (nm) | Drug Loading (%) | Phase | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genexol-PM | Paclitaxel | Solubilization | MPEG-PDLLA | <50 | 16.7 | III, IV | [ |
| NK-105 | Paclitaxel | Targeting | PEG-P(Asp) | 85 | 23.0 | II, III | [ |
| SP-1049C | Doxorubicin | Anti-MDR effect | Pluronic L61, F127 | 30 | 8.2 | I, II, III | [ |
| DTXL-TNP | Doxorubicin | Targeting | PLA-PEG, PLA-PEG-ACUPA | 100 | 10 | I | [ |
| NC-6004 | Cisplatin | Targeting | PEG-P(Glu)-Cisplatin | 30 | 39 | I, II | [ |
| NC-4016 | DACH-platin | Targeting | PEG-P(Glu)-DACH-platin | 20–100 | 25 | I | [ |
| NK 012 | SN-38 | Targeting | PEG-P(Glu)-SN38 | 20 | 20.0 | II | [ |
| NK911 | Doxorubicin | Targeting | PEG-(Asp)-Dox | 40 | II | [ |
Micellar patents issued in the area of cancer drug delivery (Adapted and modified from Mishra et al. [138]).
| Patent Type | Title | Patent No. | Chemical Formula | Action | Year | Inventor/Assignee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micelles | C6-c18-acylated derivative of hyaluronic acid | WO2014082609 A1 | (HA)-[0(C:=O)NH-M] | AC | 2014 | Contipro Biotech S.R.O. |
| Micelles | Polymer conjugated protein micelles | EP 2678001 A2 | PEG-Prolamine | AC | 2014 | South Dakota State University |
| Paclitaxel Micelle (NK105) | Micellar preparation containing sparingly water-soluble anticancer agent and novel block copolymer | 09705599.0 | (poly(ethylene glycol)-copoly (L-aspartic acid) | AC | 2013 | Nanocarrier Co. Ltd. |
| Nanoplatin® (NC-6004) | Pharmaceutical composition and combined agent | 098101554 | (poly(ethylene glycol)-copoly (amino acid) | AC | 2013 | TOUDAI TLO Ltd. |
| DACH-Platin Micelle (NC-4016) | Coordination compound composed of diaminocyclohexane platinum (Ii) and block copolymer | 2007-520209 | (poly(ethylene glycol)-copoly (amino acid) | AC | 2013 | The University of Tokyo |
| Protein Micelle | Electrostatic bonding type macromolecular micelle drug carrier | EP2583563 A1 | polyethylene glycol and poly(α,-β -aspartic acid) | AC | 2013 | TOUDAI TLO Ltd. |
| siRNA Micelle | Polyethylene glycol/polycation block copolymer | EP2087912 A1 | PEG-PLys | AC | 2013 | The University of Tokyo |
| Sensor Linked Micelle | Active targeting polymer micelle encapsulating drug, and pharmaceutical composition | 2008-539901 | poly(ethylene glycol)-b-poly(2-aminoethyl methacrylate)-b-poly(styrene) | AC | 2013 | Nanocarrier Co. Ltd. |
| pH-Sensitive Micelle | Novel block copolymer used for preparing pH-responsive polymer micelles | 2009-7007877 | [PEG-p(Asp-Hyd-Adr)] | AC | 2013 | The University of Tokyo |
| Docetaxel Micelle | Docetaxel polymer derivative, method for producing same and use of same | 2009250393 | (mPEG-PDLLA) | AC | 2013 | Nanocarrier Co. Ltd. |
| Bortezomib Micelle | Pharmaceutical composition that includes block copolymer containing boronic acid compound | EP 2692777 A1 | polyethylene glycol-polyglutamic acid | AC | 2013 | Nanocarrier Co. Ltd. |
| Micelles | Micelles for the solubilisation of gossypol | 20120321715 | Poloxamer or PEG-PCL | AC | 2012 | Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation., US |
Abbreviations: AC (Anticancer activity including ovarian cancer and various cancers such as lung and prostate cancer), MA Microaggregates), PEG/PEG 2000 (poly(ethylene glycol-2000), Hyaluronic acid (HA), C = O (carbonyl group), -PLys (polylysine), Asp(Aspartate), Hyd-Adr(hydrazone Adriamycin, poly-DL-lactide (PDLLA), PCL(polycaprolactone).