| Literature DB >> 35002719 |
Andang Miatmoko1,2, Ester Adelia Mianing3, Retno Sari1, Esti Hendradi1.
Abstract
Ursolic acid is a natural pentacyclic triterpenoid that exerts a potent anticancer effect. Furthermore, it is classified as a BCS class IV compound possessing low permeability and water solubility, consequently demonstrating limited bioavailability in addition to low therapeutic effectiveness. Nanoparticles are developed to modify the physical characteristics of drug and can often be produced in the range of 30-200 nm, providing highly effective cancer therapy due to the Enhanced Permeation and Retention (EPR) Effect. This study aims to provide a review of the efficacy and safety of various types of Ursolic Acid-loading nanoparticles within the setting of preclinical and clinical anticancer studies. This literature study used scoping review method, where the extracted data must comply with the journal inclusion criteria of within years of 2010-2020. The identification stage produced 237 suitable articles. Duplicate screening was then conducted followed by the initial selection of 18 articles that had been reviewed and extracted for data analysis. Based on this review, the use of nanoparticles can be seen to increase the anticancer efficacy of Ursolic Acid in terms of several parameters including pharmacokinetic data, survival rates and inhibition rates, as well as the absence of serious toxicity in preclinical and clinical trials in terms of several parameters including body weight, blood clinical chemistry, and organ histipathology. Based on this review, the use of nanoparticles has been able to increase the anticancer efficacy of Ursolic Acid, as well as show the absence of serious toxicity in preclinical and clinical trials. Evenmore, the liposome carrier provides development data that has reached the clinical trial phase I. The use of nanoparticle provides high potential for Ursolic Acid delivery in cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; efficacy; liposome; nanoparticle; nanosphere; polymeric micelle; toxicity; ursolic acid
Year: 2021 PMID: 35002719 PMCID: PMC8740088 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.787226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
The inclusion and exclusion criteria for article screening and selection.
| Test parameters | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Type of research | a) Randomized or non-randomized phases 1, 2, or 3 clinical trials |
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| c) Review article | |
| Intervention | a) Native UA as an active ingredient | a) Extracts containing UA and UA derivates |
| b) Nanoparticles (lipids, polymers, hybrid nanoparticles as carriers) | b) Microparticles or other carrier systems more than 1,000 nm in size | |
| c) Administration routes comprise oral route in addition to intravenous, intraperitoneal, and intratumoral injection | c) Administration routes other than those meeting the inclusion criteria (topical, transdermal) | |
| d) Healthy patients and those suffering from all types of cancer (both individuals who have undergone surgery and those who have not) | ||
| Comparison | a) No comparison with other drugs, only negative controls | - |
| b) Comparison with other drugs | ||
| Outcome | a) Primary efficacy outcomes (improved lifespan, enhanced survival rate, tumor growth inhibition) | - |
| b) Secondary efficacy outcomes (e.g., blood parameters, no complaints); improvement in physical condition (body weight, tissue histopathology); clinical and non-clinical improvements | ||
| c) Toxicity (body weight, blood parameters, clinical parameters, non-clinical parameters, adverse events | ||
| Types of Publications | a) Articles are written in English | The article is not written in English |
| b) Not included as predatory journals |
FIGURE 1Flow chart of PRISMA method for article identification, screening, and selection.
The summary of literature reviews for UA-loaded nanoparticles.
| No | Code | Carrier type | Formula-tion | Type of research | Information research | Administra-tion route | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lipo A | Liposomes | Not Available | Phase I Clinical Trials | Safety Evaluation of Double Dose and Antitumor Activity of Ursolic Acid (UAL) Liposomes in Subjects with Advanced Solid Tumors including: Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (24%), Hodgkin Lymphoma (24%), Renal Carcinoma (5%), Hepatocellular Carcinoma (5%), Breast Cancer (9%), Lung Cancer (9%), Other Cancers (19%) | Intravenous 4 h infusion at doses equivalent to 54, 74, and 96 mg UA/m2 for 14 consecutive days |
|
| 2 | Lipo B | Liposomes | Not Available | Phase I Clinical Trials | Toxicity evaluation of a single dose of intravenous ursolic acid liposomes (UAL) in healthy adult volunteers and patients with advanced solid tumors including Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, Hodgkin Lymphoma, Renal Carcinoma, and Hepatocellular Carcinoma | Intravenous (IV) route at doses equivalent to 11, 22, 37, 56, 74, and 96, and 130 mg UA/m2 administered as a 4 h infusion |
|
| 3 | Lipo C | Liposomes | Not Available | Phase I Clinical Trials | Toxicity evaluation of Ursolic Acid Nanoliposome (UANL) in healthy volunteers and patients with advanced solid tumors including: Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (50%), Hodgkin Lymphoma (12.5%), Gut Cancer (12.5%), Hepatocellular Carcinoma (25%) | Intravenous (IV) route at doses equivalent to 74 mg/m2 as a single dose, 98 mg/m2, and 74 mg/m2 as double doses daily for 14 days via a 4 h infusion |
|
| 4 | Lipo D | Liposomes | Hydrophobic components (PC, Chl, and UA) at a weight ratio of 2:1:0.5; ethanol injection method | Preclinical or | Tumor inhibition activity and toxicity studies of UA-PLL-HA in SCC-7 tumor-induced mice | Intravenous (IV) at a dose of equivalent to 20 mg UA/Kg mouse for 5 times every 4 days |
|
| 5 | Lipo E | Liposomes | PEGylated UA Liposomes composed of SPC, CHOL, and UA at a weight ratio of 50:8:5, respectively; ethanol injection method | Preclinical or | Tumor growth inhibition study and cytotoxicity of UA PEGylated liposomes in mice with U14 cervical carcinoma cells | Intragastric route at a dose of equivalent to 80 mg UA/kg mouse twice a day for a total of 14 days |
|
| 6 | Lipo F | Liposomes | Liposomes composed of hydrophobic components (SPC, CHOL and UA) at a weight ratio of 0:6:5; ethanol injection method | Preclinical or | Tumor growth inhibition and toxicity studies of CS-UA-L in mice with U14 cervical carcinoma cells | Intragastric route at a dose of equivalent to 80 mg UA/Kg mouse once a day for 14 days |
|
| 7 | Lipo G | Liposomes | Lipids-UA (HSPC/Kolesterol/DSPE-PEG2000/UA = 90/0/5/5 and 90/0/5/10, (molar ratio); thin film hydration method | Preclinical or | Tumor and growth inhibition study of UA-L in mice with 4T1 tumors (breast cancer) | Intravenous (IV) route at a dose of equivalent to 10 mg UA/kg mouse for 5 times every other day |
|
| 8 | Lipo H | Liposomes | Lipid components of FA-UA-L: DOTAP/CHOL/MPEG-DSPE2000/FA-PEG-CHEMS at a molar ratio of 40:55:4, 5:0, 5 (equal to weight ratio of 28; 21,3; 12,6, dan 2, 1 mg). The ratio of UA to lipid is 1:20 (w/w); thin film hydration method | Preclinical or | Tumor growth inhibition and toxicity studies of FA-UA/siRNA-L in mice with human kB cells tumor | Intravenous (IV) injection with the dose of 4.5 mg/kg for UA and 170 μg/kg for siRNA for 5 times every other day |
|
| 9 | Lipo I | Liposomes | Lipid composition: HSPC/CHOL/mPEG-DSPE2000/FA-PEG-CHEMS at molar ratio 63:32:4.5:0.5 (equal to weights amount of 48, 12, 13.4, and 5 mg), respectively. The ratio of UA to lipids is 1:20 (w/w); thin film hydration method | Preclinical or | Efficacy study of FTL-UA for tumor inhbition in mice with human KB tumor cells | Intravenous (IV) at a dose of equivalent to 4.5 mg UA/kg mouse for 5 times every other day, which is similar to 23 mg/kg or 98 mg/m2 drug administration |
|
| 10 | Nano A | Nanospheres | Not available | Preclinical or | Tumor growth inhibition and toxicity studies of HCPT @F-Pt-PU NPs in mice with H22 subcutaneous tumors (liver cancer) | Intravenous (IV) injection at a dose of equivalent to 10 mg UA/kg mouse for 5 times every 2 days |
|
| 11 | Nano B | Nanospheres | NP composed of 32 mg chitosan, 10 mg UA, 30 mg EDC, and 8 mg NHS. The ratio of UA to lipids is 1:10 (w/w); overnight magnetic stirring method | Preclinical or | Tumor inhibition study of CH-UA-NPs in mice with H22 subcutaneous tumors (liver cancer) | Oral administration at a dose of equivalent to 11 mg UA/Kg mouse once every 2 days for a total of 8 times |
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| 12 | Nano C | Nanospheres | NP composed of 32 mg chitosan, 10 mg UA, 30 mg EDC, and 8 mg NHS. The ratio of UA to lipids is 1:10 (w/w); overnight magnetic stirring method | Preclinical or | FA-CS-UA-NPs tumor inhibiting activity study in MCF-7 xenograft bearing models (breast cancer) | Intraperitoneal (IP) injection at a dose of equivalent to 12.5 mg UA/kg mouse once a day for 9 times |
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| 13 | Nano D | Nanospheres | Not available | Preclinical or | Tumor growth inhibition efficacy and toxicity studies of UA-LA-ICG NPs in tumor bearing mice by murine H22-hepatocarcinoma cells induced tumor xenograft models | Intravenous (IV) injection at a dose of 10 mg/kg of UA and 2.5 mg/kg of ICG with 5 min irradiation at 24 h post injection |
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| 14 | Nano E | Nanospheres | Prepared by making 3 mg UA solution in ethanol (1 ml, 6,569 mM) in 10 ml of water. The ratio of UA and NPs was 1:10, respectively; solvent exchange preparation method | Preclinical or | Tumor inhibition efficacy and toxicity studies of UA NPs in mice bearing A549 xenograft models (lung cancer) | Intravenous (IV) injection at a dose of 8 mg/kg of UA for 21 days |
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| 15 | Nano F | Nanospheres | Not available | Preclinical or | Tumor inhibiting activity and toxicity studies of UA NPs in H22-induced mice (Hepatocellular carcinoma) | Intraperitoneal (IP) injection at a daily dose of 50 mg/kg of UA for 10 days |
|
| 16 | Nano G | Nanospheres | Self-assembly method of polymer deposition | Preclinical or | Antitumor activity and toxicity studies of Pec-8PUH NPs in mice with 4T1 tumors (breast cancer) | Intravenous (IV) injection at a dose of 10 mg/kg of UA once every 2 days for 5 times |
|
| 17 | Poli A | Polymeric Micelles | PM composed of UA (4 mg) and mPEG2000-PLA2000 (40 mg) at a weight ratio of 1:10; thin film dispersion method | Preclinical or | Antitumor activity and toxicity studies of UA-PMs in H22-induced mice (Hepatocellular carcinoma) | Intraperitoneal (IP) injection at a dose of 50 mg/kg of UA every 2 days for 6 times |
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| 18 | Poli B | Polymeric Micelles | Solvent evaporation method | Preclinical or | Antitumor activity and toxicity studies of U-SS-M in tumor bearing MG-63/Osteosarcoma (OS) | Intravenous (IV) injection at a dose of 11 mg/kg of UA every 3 days for 5 times |
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Notes: UAL, Ursolic Acid Liposome; UANL, Ursolic Acid Nanoliposome; UA-PLL-HA, Ursolic Acid-Poly-L-Lysine-Hyaluronic Acid; UA-PEGylated, Ursolic Acid-Polietilenglikolisasi; CH-UA-NPs, Chitosan-Ursolic Acid-Nanoparticles; CS-UA-L, Chitosan- Ursolic Acid-Liposome; CHOL/Chl, Cholesterol; DSPE-PEG2000, 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N [methoxy (poly- ethylene glycol) -2000]; DOTAP, 1, 2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane; EDC, Ethyl-(3-3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbondiimide hydrochloride; FA-CS-UA-NPs, Folate- Chitosan-Ursolic Acid-Nanoparticles; FA-PEG-CHEMS, Folate Polyethylene Glycol Cholesteryl hemisuccinate; FA-UA/siRNA-L, Folate- Ursolic Acid/Small Interfering RNA-Liposome; F-Pt-PU, Folic Acid-Pectin-Eight-Arm PEG-UA conjugate; FTL-UA, Folate Receptor Targeted Liposome-Ursolic Acid; HCPT @F-Pt-PU NPs, Hydroxycamptothecin @folic acid-pectin-eight-arm PEG-UA nanoparticle; HSPC, Hydrogenated Soybean Phosphatidyl Choline; mPEG2000-PLA2000, Monomethoxy Polyethylene Glycol 2000 Poly Lactic Acid 2000; MPEG-DSPE2000, Monomethoxy Polyethylene Glycol 2000-Distearoyl Phosphatidylethanolamine; NHS, N-Hydroxy-Succinimide; PC, Phosphatidylcholine; Pec-8PUH NPs, pectin-eight-arm polyethylene glycol-ursolic acid/hydrooxycampothecin nanoparticle; SPC, Soybean Phosphatidyl Choline; UA-NPs, Ursolic Acid- Nanoparticles; UA-LA-ICG NPs, Ursolic Acid- Lactobionic Acid -Indocyanine Green; UA-PMs, Ursolic Acid-Polymer Micelles; U-SS-M, Micelles assembled by PEG-SS-UA (polyethylene glycol using a disulfide bond)
FIGURE 2(A) Types of drug carrier extracted from the article review regarding the preclinical and clinical studies of nanoparticle use for UA delivery within cancer therapy, (B) the physical characteristics of UA-loaded nanoparticles including particle size, zeta potential, and efficiency of encapsulation.
Pharmacokinetic data from clinical trials of UA-loading nanoparticles.
| Parameter | Lipo A | Lipo B | Lipo C | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Administration Route | Intravenous | Intravenous | Intravenous | |||||
| Dose (mg/m2) | 74 (double dose) | 37 | 74 | 98 | 37 | 74 (single dose) | 98 | 74 (double dose) |
|
| 4.58 ± 2.04 | 4.59 ± 2.44 | 4.46 ± 1.41 | 3.90 ± 2.08 | 4.59 ± 2.44 | 4.46 ± 1.41 | 3.90 ± 2.08 | 4.58 ± 2.04 |
|
| NA | NA | NA | NA | 58.7 ± 33.0 | 64.3 ± 17.9 | 55.4 ± 28.1 | 88.6 ± 31.8 |
| CL (L/h/m2) | NA | 8.65 ± 1.09 | 10.2 ± 1.46 | 9.94 ± 1.13 | 8.67 ± 1.07 | 10.20 ± 1.46 | 9.94 ± 1.13 | 14.40 ± 3.94 |
|
| 5,172 ± 1,136 | 4,213 ± 606 | 7,175 ± 999 | 9,696 ± 1,134 | 4,203 ± 588 | 7,175 ± 999 | 9,696 ± 1,134 | 5,172 ± 1,136 |
|
| 5,498 ± 1,525 | 4,339 ± 574 | 7,418 ± 1,057 | 9,971 ± 1,144 | 4,329 ± 556 | 7,418 ± 1,057 | 9,971 ± 1,144 | 5,498 ± 1,525 |
|
| NA | 3.69 ± 0.36 | 3.93 ± 0.37 | 3.84 ± 0.34 | 3.69 ± 0.36 | 3.93 ± 0.37 | 3.84 ± 0.34 | 3.34 ± 0.55 |
|
| NA | 4.28 ± 0.91 | 4.56 ± 0.88 | 4.41 ± 0.95 | 4.29 ± 0.90 | 4.56 ± 0.88 | 4.41 ± 0.95 | 4.31 ± 1.89 |
|
| 1,589 ± 635 | 1835 ± 438 | 2,865 ± 868 | 3,457 ± 856 | 1835 ± 438 | 2,865 ± 868 | 3,457 ± 856 | 1,589 ± 635 |
|
| NA | 4.03 ± 0.04 | 4.02 ± 0.04 | 4.0 ± 0.00 | 4.03 ± 0.04 | 4.02 ± 0.04 | 4.00 ± 0.00 | 3.00 ± 1.41 |
Notes: , half-life time; , distribution volume; CL, clearance; AUC, area under curve of concentration vs time; MRT, mean retention time; , maximum plasma concentration; , time required to reach maximum plasma concentration.
Pharmacokinetic data summary of preclinical studies of nanoparticles containing UA.
| Parameter | Lipo E | Nano A | Nano G | Poli B |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Administration route | intragastric | intravenous | intravenous | intravenous |
| UA dose (mg/kg) | 80 | 10 | 10 | 11 |
|
| 8.6 | 8.3 and 10 | 8.7 | 4.9 and 5.2 |
| AUC (µg.h/ml) | 134.061 | NA | NA | NA |
|
| 19.87 | NA | NA | NA |
|
| NA | 80 | 80 | 48 |
Notes: , half-life time; AUC, area under curve of concentration versus time; , maximum plasma concentration; , time required to reach maximum plasma concentration.
FIGURE 3Research recapitulation of (A) clincial and preclinical studies, (B) types of nanoparticle use in clinical trials, (C) and pre-clinical trials.
Tissue histopathology of liver cancer after administration of negative control, native UA and nanoparticles containing UA.
| Code | Tissue histopathology | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative control | Free UA | Nanoparticles containing UA | |
| Lipo E | It features no hemorrhagic or necrosis phenomena and the cell is round or polygonal | Tumor cells and angiogenesis occur in native UA solution and conventional UA liposomes treatment groups, which become rare with slight necrosis | The tumor cells of the UA liposome with polyethylene glycols (PEGylated UA Liposome) group undergo severe necrosis, the nucleus/pulp ratio is significantly reduced, and apoptosis occurs due to a large number of scattered single tumor cells |
| Lipo F | The nucleus size and tumor cell shape are irregular. The tumor cells have clear cellular morphology and chromatin indicating that the tumor cells are growing quickly | A limited shrinkage and fragmentation of the nucleus indicates a low rate of tumor cell necrosis | Most tumor tissue cells in the group treated with Chitosan-Ursolic Acid-Liposomes (CS-UA-L) undergo apoptosis or necrosis, indicating good potential for killing cancer cells |
| Nano B | There are numerous sinusoids and small blood vessels filled with blood (indicated by the arrow) spreading through the hepatocellular carcinoma trabeculae | Not available | Several sinusoid liver or blood vessels can be observed in Chitosan-Ursolic Acid-Nanoparticle (CH-UA-NP) group with the exception of liver sinusoid dysplasia. Massive necrotic tissue can still be observed in hepatocellular carcinoma |
| Poli A | Tumor necrosis is undefined in the saline treatment group | Tumor cells and angiogenesis become rare with little necrosis | Most cancer cells in the high-dose Ursolic Acid-Polymer Micelles (UA-PMs) group at 100 mg/kg showed a high degree of H22 cell necrosis |
FIGURE 5(A) Relative tumor volume in animal models treated with UA-loaded nanoparticles compared to negative control (black bars) and UA-free treatment groups (grey bars), (B) relative tumor tissue weight of animal models treated with UA-loaded nanoparticles compared to negative control (black bars) and native UA-treatment groups (grey bars).
FIGURE 4(A) Relative tumor growth inhibition rate of animal models treated with nanoparticles loading UA compared to native UA treatment groups, (B) Relative survival rate of animal models treated with UA-loaded nanoparticles compared to the negative control.
The relative body weight of animal models treated with UA-loaded nanoparticles compared to negative control and native UA-treatment groups.
| Code | Toxicity |
|---|---|
| Lipo H | ALT and AST levels were significantly higher following an injection of FA-UA/siRNA-L compared to that of saline solution. The AST/ALT ratio of the FA-UA/siRNA-L group was significantly lower than that of the saline group. These results suggest that liver toxicity caused by liposomes produces mild, temporary liver toxicity |
| Nano A | The number of rat WBCs in the NP HCPT@F-Pt-PU treatment group increased more rapidly than in the native UA group which suggests that folate-targeted pectin delivery systems may prevent serious hematological toxicity |
| Nano D | There was no obvious cell damage or morphological changes in the major organs i.e., heart, liver, spleen, lungs, and kidneys in the NP UA-LA-ICG treatment group members compared to those of the negative control group |
| Nano E | ALT levels in mice treated with UA-NP were significantly lower than in the CCl4 group members, but there were no changes in the native UA- treatment group. In addition, AST levels in the UA-NP treatment group were also significantly lower compared to the CCl4 group and the native UA-treatment groups |
| Nano F | The native UA group experienced necropsy in the central section of the tumor tissue. These results partly suggest that native UA causes more toxicity than UA-NP. Meanwhile, H&E staining indicated that there were no obvious abnormalities or inflammatory lesions in any of the five organs, i.e., heart, liver, spleen, lungs, kidneys for the UA-NP treatment group when compared to their negative control and native UA counterparts |
| Nano G | Rats treated with the Pec-8PUH-NPs group did not experience any significant reduction in WBC counts as an indicator of hematotoxicity suggesting that the use of nanoparticles might prevent hematological toxicity |
Recapitulation of other preclinical toxicities.
| Relative body weight | ||
|---|---|---|
| Code | Results | |
| NC/AU-NP | AU/AU-NP | |
| Lipo D | Decreased by 1.2x normal value (Not significant) | Increased by 1.0x AU value (Not significant) |
| Lipo E | Decreased by 1.1x normal value (Not significant) | Increased by 1.0x AU value (Not significant) |
| Lipo F | Decreased by 1.2x normal value (Not significant) | Decreased by 1.0x AU value (Not significant) |
| Lipo G | There is no obvious difference | Not available |
| Lipo H | Decreased by 1.0x normal value (Not significant) | There is no obvious difference |
| Nano A | There is no obvious difference | There is no obvious difference |
| Nano D | There is no obvious difference | There is no obvious difference |
| Nano E | There is no obvious difference | There is no obvious difference |
| Nano F | Decreased by 1.0x normal value (Not significant) | Increased by 0.9x AU value (Not significant) |
| Nano G | There is no obvious difference | There is no obvious difference |
| Poli A | Decreased by 1.1x normal value (Not significant) | Decreased by 1.0x AU value (Not significant) |
| Poli B | There is no obvious difference | There is no obvious difference |
FIGURE 6(A) Total subjects with increasing blood marker levels on clinical trials of Lipo A, Lipo B, and Lipo C, (B) Adverse events of Lipo A during phase I clinical trials. Notes: AST, Alanine Aminotransferase/SGPT (serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase); ALT, Aspartate Aminotransferase/SGOT (serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase); GGT, Gamma Glutamyl Transpeptidase; TG, Triglycerides; DBIL, Direct Bilirubin; TBIL, Total Bilirubin.
FIGURE 7Total subjects with adverse events of (A) Lipo B, and (B) Lipo C in phase I clinical trials. AST, Alanine Aminotransferase/SGPT (serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase); ALT, Aspartate Aminotransferase/SGOT (serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase); GGT, Gamma Glutamyl Transpeptidase; DBIL, Direct Bilirubin; TBIL, Total Bilirubin; TG, Triglycerides