| Literature DB >> 32431498 |
Chiara Ferraris1, Roberta Cavalli1, Pier Paolo Panciani2, Luigi Battaglia1.
Abstract
High-grade gliomas are still characterized by a poor prognosis, despite recent advances in surgical treatment. Chemotherapy is currently practiced after surgery, but its efficacy is limited by aspecific toxicity on healthy cells, tumour cell chemoresistance, poor selectivity, and especially by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Thus, despite the large number of potential drug candidates, the choice of effective chemotherapeutics is still limited to few compounds. Malignant gliomas are characterized by high infiltration and neovascularization, and leaky BBB (the so-called blood-brain tumour barrier); surgical resection is often incomplete, leaving residual cells that are able to migrate and proliferate. Nanocarriers can favour delivery of chemotherapeutics to brain tumours owing to different strategies, including chemical stabilization of the drug in the bloodstream; passive targeting (because of the leaky vascularization at the tumour site); inhibition of drug efflux mechanisms in endothelial and cancer cells; and active targeting by exploiting carriers and receptors overexpressed at the blood-brain tumour barrier. Within this concern, a suitable nanomedicine-based therapy for gliomas should not be limited to cytotoxic agents, but also target the most important pathogenetic mechanisms, including cell differentiation pathways and angiogenesis. Moreover, the combinatorial approach of cell therapy plus nanomedicine strategies can open new therapeutical opportunities. The major part of attempted preclinical approaches on animal models involves active targeting with protein ligands, but, despite encouraging results, a few number of nanomedicines reached clinical trials, and most of them include drug-loaded nanocarriers free of targeting ligands, also because of safety and scalability concerns.Entities:
Keywords: blood–brain barrier; blood–brain tumour barrier; glioma; nanoparticles; targeting
Year: 2020 PMID: 32431498 PMCID: PMC7201023 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S231479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1Main mechanisms of experimental drugs used against high-grade gliomas.
Abbreviations: avß3/avß5, avß3/avß5 heterodimers; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EGFRvIII, mutant EGFR; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; PDGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor; PI3K/Akt/mTOR, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B/mammalian target of rapamycin; PKC, protein kinase C; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; Ras/MAPK, Ras mitogen-activated protein kinase; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Experimental Drugs Against High-Grade Gliomas
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|
| Cytotoxic agents | Complete oral bioavailability of TMZ Capacity of nitrosoureas and temozolomide to cross the BBB Clinical efficacy of nitrosoureas chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy Clinical efficacy of the combination of etoposide and platinum salts Availability of newer platinum derivatives (eg oxaliplatin) with activity against resistant tumors | Important side effects: nausea, myelosuppression, hepatotoxicity, DOX cardiotoxicity, cisplatin nephrotoxicity, etc Generally i.v. administered |
| VEGFR inhibitors | Orally administered Potential availability of biomarkers indicative of tumour responsiveness to VEGF inhibition Vascular normalization induced may reduce interstitial fluid pressure and allow better drug penetration Reduced tumour hypoxia Well tolerated | Continued tumour growth in monotherapy |
| Anti-VEGF antibodies | Size reduction in xenograft models Good clinical efficacy also in monotherapy | Severe toxicities, especially in combination with irinotecan i.v. administration |
| EGFR inhibitors | Potential identification of EGFR inhibition sensitive phenotypes | Limited efficacy both as mono and combination therapy, or radiotherapy Severe toxicities |
| Anti-EGFR antibodies | Orally administered Binding to both wild-type and EGFRvIII receptors Increased survival in combination with radiotherapy in mouse models Responsiveness as monotherapy in EGFR overexpressing patients refractory to standard chemotherapy Well tolerated | No difference in survival between normal and EGFR overexpressing patients i.v. administration |
| PDGFR inhibitors | Orally administered Promising direct antitumor activity in preclinical models Sensitize glioma cells to radiation Through vascular normalization, it facilitates the tumor penetration of cytotoxic drugs Well tolerated | Poor clinical efficacy as monotherapy |
| Ras/MAPK inhibitors | Orally administered Safety and efficacy of tipifarnib in combination therapy | No clinical efficacy of tipifarnib monotherapy |
| PKC inhibitors | Orally administered Well tolerated and promising efficacy in highly pretreated patients | High doses are poorly tolerated with cardiovascular side effects |
| PI3K/Akt/mTOR inhibitors | Everolimus and sirolimus orally administered Tumor growth was retarded in some patients Well tolerated | Significant activation of Akt, potentially resulting in a reduced time to progression No clinical efficacy as monotherapy |
| Multi target inhibitors | Multiple target inhibition with a single agent Pazopanib, sorafenib, sunitinib, tandutinib, vandetanib orally administered Sorafenib overcomes BBB | No clinical benefit as monotherapy |
| MMP inhibitors | MMP overexpression in gliomas | Negligible clinical efficacy Severe toxicities |
| Integrin inhibitors | Minimal toxicity also at high doses | Limited clinical efficacy as monotherapy |
Abbreviations: Akt, protein kinase B; BBB, blood–brain barrier; DOX, doxorubicin; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EGFRvIII, mutant EGFR; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; PDGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor; PI3K/Akt/mTOR, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B/mammalian target of rapamycin; PKC, protein kinase C; Ras/MAPK, Ras mitogen-activated protein kinase; TMZ, temozolomide; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor.
Figure 2Rationale of employing nanomedicines for glioma treatment.
Abbreviations: BBB, blood–brain barrier; BBTB, blood–brain tumour barrier; CMT, carrier-mediated transport; EPR, enhanced permeation and retention; HIF, hypoxia-induced factors; P-gp, P-glycoprotein; RMT, receptor-mediated transport.
Figure 3Scheme of brain delivery of nanoparticles with focused ultrasound (FUS) technique.
Abbreviation: SF6, sulfur hexafluoride.
Plain Nanocarriers Aiming to Glioma Therapy Employed in Preclinical Studies
| Nanocarriers | Drug | Experimental in vivo Model | Achievements in vivo | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AgNPs combined with MNPH | Ag+ | Efficacy in glioma rat model | Enhanced Bcl-2-associated X protein expression | [ |
| Cationic SLN | PEGylated c-Met siRNA | Efficacy in U87 xenografts | Enhanced accumulation in brain tumour and down-regulation of c-Met levels | [ |
| Liposomes | Oxaliplatin | Biodistribution and survival analysis in F98/Fischer glioma model | Increased brain oxaliplatin concentration and median survival time of glioma models | [ |
| NLC | TMZ; GFP encoding pDNA | Efficacy in U87 xenografts | Gene transfection and enhanced antitumor activity | [ |
| PLGA nanoparticles, SLN, NLC | TMZ | Efficacy in U87 xenografts | Best efficacy obtained with NLC formulation | [ |
| Polymer nanogel | miRNA miR.34a | Efficacy in U87 xenografts | Significant tumor growth inhibition | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 coated PBCA nanoparticles | DOX | Biodistribution in glioma models | Increased accumulation of DOX in brain tumour | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 coated PBCA nanoparticles | TMZ | Biodistribution in healthy rats | Increased brain uptake of TMZ | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 coated PBCA nanoparticles | Gemcitabine | Survival analysis in C6/Sprague Dawley rat glioma models | Prolonged survival of glioma models | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 coated PLA nanoparticles | TMZ | Pharmacokinetic and biodistribution in rats | Enhancement in half-life of TMZ with higher deposition in the brain | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 coated SLN | CPT | Pharmacokinetic and biodistribution in rats | Increased brain accumulation of CPT | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 coated SPION | DOX | Biodistribution and efficacy in C6/Sprague Dawley glioma model | Enhanced brain accumulation of SPION and increased anti- tumour efficacy under magnetic field | [ |
| SLN | PTX | Rat brain perfusion experiment after intra-carotid administration | Enhanced PTX accumulation in brain; P-gp overcoming | [ |
| SLN | EDF | Biodistribution and efficacy in subcutaneous mouse model | Good drug accumulation in brain after oral administration; P-gp overcoming | [ |
| SLN | DOX | Pharmacokinetic and biodistribution in rats and rabbits | Enhanced DOX accumulation in brain | [ |
| SLN | Idarubicin | Pharmacokinetic and biodistribution in rats | Enhanced idarubicin accumulation in brain after SLN oral administration | [ |
| SLN, NLC | TMZ; vincristine | Efficacy in U87 xenografts | Improved glioma inhibition with NLC and drug co-delivery | [ |
Abbreviations: AgNPs, silver nanoparticles; Bcl-2, B-cell lymphoma 2; c-Met, tyrosine-protein kinase Met; C6, C6 cells; CPT, camptothecin; DOX, doxorubicin; EDF, edelfosine; GFP, green fluorescent protein; miRNA, microRNA; MNPH, magnetic nanoparticle hyperthermia; NLC, nanostructured lipid carriers, PBCA, poly(butyl cyanoacrylate); pDNA, plasmid DNA; PEG, polyethylenglycol; P-gp, P-glycoprotein; PLA, poly-lactide; PLGA, poly-lactide-glycolide; PTX, paclitaxel; siRNA, small interfering RNA; SLN, solid lipid nanoparticles; SPION, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles; U87, U87 cells; TMZ, temozolomide.
Functionalized Nanocarriers Aiming to Glioma Therapy Employed in Preclinical Studies
| Nanocarriers | Drug | Functionalization | Experimental in vivo Model | Achievements in vivo | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polymeric nanoparticles | TMZ | Angiopep-2 | Biodistribution of liposomes and efficacy in C6/ICR mouse glioma models | Enhanced brain distribution of DOX and promising efficacy in glioma models | [ |
| Dendrimers | TRAIL DNA | Angiopep-2 | Biodistribution of dendrimers and survival analysis in C6 mouse xenografts | Increased survival of xenografts | [ |
| PCL nanoparticles | DOX | Angiopep-2 | Pharmacokinetics, biodistribution and survival analysis in C6/Wistar rat glioma models | Enhanced brain uptake of DOX, prolonged survival of glioma models | [ |
| PLGA nanoparticles | IP10 | Angiopep-2; EGFRvIII scFv | Efficacy in U87-EGFRvIII cells xenografts | Reduced tumour growth, prolonged survival of glioma models | [ |
| Liposomes | Daunomycin | Anti Tf Receptor antibody | Pharmacokinetic & biodistribution in rats | Increased daunomycin accumulation in brain | [ |
| Calcium phosphate nanoparticles | ATF5 siRNA | Apo E | Glioma distribution, ATF5 expression and survival analysis in C6 mouse xenografts | Efficient tumour targeting and increased survival of xenografts | [ |
| Polymersomes | Saporin | Apo E | Biodistribution and efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Specific brain accumulation of polymersomes, encouraging efficacy towards brain tumours | [ |
| SLN | MTX prodrug | Apo E chimera peptide | Biodistribution and survival analysis in F98/Fischer rat glioma model | Increased brain accumulation of MTX; encouraging efficacy | [ |
| Lipid nanoparticles | Porphyrin | Apo E3 | Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution in mice, efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Selective drug accumulation in brain tumour compared to healthy parenchyma | [ |
| Liposomes | – | Cetuximab | Biodistribution in U87 mouse xenografts | Increased brain accumulation of liposomes | [ |
| Liposomes | DOX | Chlorotoxin | Biodistribution of liposomes and efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Brain accumulation of liposomes, reduced tumour growth | [ |
| Polyionic micelles | Cilengitide | Cilengitide | Survival analysis in C6/Wistar rat glioma models | Prolonged survival of glioma models | [ |
| Polymeric micelles | DACHPt | Cilengitide | Efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Reduced tumour growth | [ |
| Liposomes | DOX | Cilengitide and Peptide 22 (LDL receptor) | Biodistribution and survival analysis in intracranial glioma-bearing mice | Prolonged survival time of glioma models | [ |
| PEG−PLA micelles | PTX | EGFR/EGFRvIII targeting peptide | Pharmacokinetics in healthy rats, biodistribution and efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Specific micelles distribution to the brain, reduced tumour growth in glioma models | [ |
| PEG-PLA nanoparticles | PTX | F3 peptide (targeting nucleolin) and tLyp-1 peptide (targeting neuropilin) | Pharmacokinetics in rats; biodistribution and survival analysis in C6 mouse xenografts | Enhanced PTX accumulation and deep penetration at the tumour location; prolonged survival in xenografts | [ |
| PEGilated liposomes | DOX | GSH | Pharmacokinetics, biodistribution and efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Enhanced brain retention of DOX; strong inhibition of brain tumour growth | [ |
| Liposomes | DOX | IL-13 | Efficacy in U251 mouse xenografts | Reduced tumour growth in glioma models | [ |
| BSA nanoparticles | DOX | Lf | Pharmacokinetics in rats, biodistribution in C6/Wistar rat glioma model | Increased brain uptake of DOX | [ |
| Cationic liposomes | DOX | Lf | Biodistribution and survival analysis in C6/Wistar rat glioma models | Increased accumulation of DOX in brain and prolonged survival time of glioma models | [ |
| Liposomes | 99mTc-BMEDA | Lf | Pharmacokinetic & biodistribution in mice | Increased brain accumulation | [ |
| Olive oil nanoparticles | TMZ | Lf | Pharmacokinetic & biodistribution in healthy mice; biodistribution and efficacy in GL261/C57BL | Enhanced brain distribution of TMZ and promising efficacy towards glioma | [ |
| Olive oil nanoparticles | Aurora Kinase B siRNA | Lf | Gene silencing and survival analysis in GL261/C57BL | Survival improvement of glioma models treated with nanoparticles and TMZ simultaneously | [ |
| PEG-PCL polymersomes | DOX and tetrandrine | Lf | Pharmacokinetics, biodistribution and efficacy in C6/Wistar rat glioma model | Improved DOX distribution in brain, reduced tumour growth and increased survival in glioma models | [ |
| PEG-PLA nanoparticles | PTX | Lf and tLyp-1 peptide (targeting neuropilin) | Pharmacokinetics in healthy rats, biodistribution and efficacy in C6 mouse xenografts | Enhanced tumour accumulation of PTX and increased survival of glioma models | [ |
| NLC | TMZ and vincristine | Lf, RGD | Biodistribution and efficacy in U87 xenografts | Specific brain distribution of the drugs, promising efficacy in glioma models | [ |
| Liposomes | DOX and vincristine | T7 and DA7R | Biodistribution of liposomes and efficacy in C6/ICR mouse glioma models | Enhanced brain distribution of liposomes and promising efficacy in glioma models | [ |
| Liposomes | 5-fluorouracil | Tf | Biodistribution of radiolabelled liposomes in healthy rats | Increased brain uptake of liposomes | [ |
| Liposomes | TMZ and bromodomain inhibitor | Tf | Biodistribution in mice and efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts and C57BL | Improved liposomes distribution to the brain; promising efficacy in glioma models | [ |
| SLN | MTX prodrug | Tf, Insulin | Biodistribution in healthy rats | Increased brain accumulation of MTX | [ |
| Liposomes | DOX | Tf, Octaarginin | Biodistribution of liposomes and efficacy in U87 mouse xenografts | Prolonged survival of glioma models | [ |
| SLN | Docetaxel | HBA | Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution in healthy rats | Enhanced drug brain uptake | [ |
| SLN | Docetaxel ketoconazole | Folic acid | Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution in healthy rats | Enhanced drug brain uptake; P-gp overcoming | [ |
| PEG-co-PCL nanoparticles | PTX | Activatable LMWP coupled to a MMP-2/9-cleavable peptide sequence | Pharmacokinetics in rats; biodistribution and efficacy in C6 mouse xenografts | Specific PTX accumulation in glioma; enhanced efficacy in xenografts | [ |
Abbreviations: 99mTc-labeled N,N-bis(2-mercaptoethyl)-N’,N’-diethylethylenediamine (99mTc-BMEDA); Apo, apolipoprotein; ATF5, activating transcription factor-5; C6, C6 cells; DA7R, DADTDWDLDPDPDR sequence, which has a high affinity for VEGFR 2; DACHPt, (1,2-diaminocyclohexane)platinum(II); DOX, doxorubicin; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EGFRvIII, mutant EGFR; F98, F98 cells; GL261, GL261 cells; GSH, glutathione; HBA, β-hydroxybutyric acid; IP10, Interferon-γ-inducible protein; LDL, low density lipoprotein; Lf, lactoferrin; LMWP, low-molecular-weight protein; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; MTX, methotrexate; NLC, nanostructured lipid carriers; PCL, poly(ε-caprolactone); PEG, polyethylenglycol; P-gp, P-glycoprotein; PLA, poly-lactide; PLGA, poly-lactide-glycolide; PTX, paclitaxel; RGD, arginine-glycine-aspartic acid; scFv, single-chain Fv fragments; siRNA, small interfering RNA; SLN, solid lipid nanoparticles; T7, HAIYPRH sequence, which can bind to Tf receptors; Tf, transferrin; TMZ, temozolomide; TRAIL, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) related apoptosis-inducing ligand; U251, U251 cells; U87, U87 cells.
Figure 4Scheme of the main mechanism used for active targeting of nanocarriers in glioma therapy. Blue: endogenous ligands; red: exogenous ligands.
Abbreviations: avß3/avß5, avß3/avß5 heterodimers; CTX, chlorotoxin; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; GSH, glutathione; HFE, homeostatic iron regulator protein; IL 13, interleukin 13; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; Lf, lactoferrin; MCT-1, monocarboxylic acid transporter 1; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; Tf, transferrin.
Figure 5Scheme of nanocarrier mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) combined therapy of gliomas.
Figure 6Scheme of homotypic targeting of glioma cell membrane-coated nanoparticles.