| Literature DB >> 33953597 |
Liucan Wang1, Min Yu1, Hua Yang1.
Abstract
The effective colon drug delivery remains to be an international frontier research in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) therapy. The exploration and research of nanocarrier-based nanomedicine with great potential brings new opportunities for IBD therapy and diagnoses. Functional nanocarriers with varying morphology and characteristics can not only effectively avoid the destruction of the complex gastrointestinal (GI) tract microenvironment but also endow drugs with target therapy and improved bioavailability, thus elevating therapeutic efficacy. In this review, we illustrated several challenges in IBD therapy, then emphasis on some latest research progress of nanoparticles based therapy of oral administration, rectal administration and parenteral administration, as well as IBD diagnoses. Finally, we described the future perspective of nanocarriers in the treatment and diagnoses of IBD.Entities:
Keywords: diagnose; drug delivery system; gastrointestinal tract microenvironment; inflammatory bowel disease; precise therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33953597 PMCID: PMC8092629 DOI: 10.2147/JIR.S304101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inflamm Res ISSN: 1178-7031
Figure 1Nanoparticles that is suitable for drug delivery, including lipid nanoparticles, polymer nanoparticles, mesoporous nanoparticles, chitosan nanoparticles, hydrogel nanoparticles and metal nanoparticles.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of GIT microenvironment-based target drug delivery.
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the scheme of inflammation-targeting in IBD. Through oral administration and rectal administration (I.V. administration are not depicted here), nanoparticles target the inflamed colon by mechanisms mediated by size (A), charge (B), ligand-receptor (C), pH (D), ROS (E), GSH and enzyme (F).
Recent Representative Advances of Inflamed Intestinal Microenvironment-Stimulated Drug Delivery Platforms for IBD Therapy
| System | Size | Model Drug | Target Mechanism | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AP@PSi-HA@HPMCAS | 35 ± 1µm | Budesonide (BUD) and acorbyl palmitate (AP) | pH-stimulated | [ |
| YGPs/MTX | 2–4 µm | Methotrexate | pH-stimulated | [ |
| HNT-ATV@HF-CEL | 70 ± 8 μm | Atorvastatin and celecoxib | pH-stimulated | [ |
| CAP1AG4CH5@CUNCs | 421 ± 14 nm | Curcumin | pH-stimulated | [ |
| OxiDEX nano-in-micro composites | 53 ± 3 µm | Rifaximin | pH and ROS-Sequential Responsive | [ |
| P(LE-IAMEG) hydrogel microspheres (HMSs) | 34.87 ± 0.90 µm | Hydrocortisone sodium succinate (HSS) | pH-stimulated | [ |
| BLG-RES nanospheres | 200−250 nm | Resveratrol | pH-stimulated | [ |
| OxbCD | 202 ± 4 nm | Annexin A1-mimetic peptide Ac2-26 | ROS-stimulated | [ |
| Bud-ATK-Tem (B-ATK-T) | 100~120 nm | Budesonide and antioxidant tempol | ROS-stimulated | [ |
| RANPs | 63.5 ± 4.0 nm | Dexamethasone | ROS-stimulated | [ |
| EGCG-NPs | ~202.9 nm | Epigallo-catechin 3-gallate | GSH-stimulated | [ |
| MSs (multilayer-coated mesoporous silica) | 210–258 nm | Hydrocortisone | Enzyme-stimulated | [ |
| PPNP (polyphenols and polymers self-assembled nanoparticle) | ~60 nm | Dexamethasone | Enzyme-stimulated | [ |