| Literature DB >> 35571568 |
Loredana Maria Himiniuc1, Bogdan Florin Toma1, Razvan Popovici2, Ana Maria Grigore1, Alexandru Hamod3, Constantin Volovat4,5, Simona Volovat4,5, Irina Nica6, Decebal Vasincu7, Maricel Agop8,9, Mihaela Tirnovanu2, Lacramioara Ochiuz10, Anca Negura11,12, Mihaela Grigore2.
Abstract
Cervical cancer represents a major health problem among females due to its increased mortality rate. The conventional therapies are very aggressive and unsatisfactory when it comes to survival rate, especially in terminal stages, which requires the development of new treatment alternatives. With the use of nanotechnology, various chemotherapeutic drugs can be transported via nanocarriers directly to cervical cancerous cells, thus skipping the hepatic first-pass effect and decreasing the rate of chemotherapy side effects. This review comprises various drug delivery systems that were applied in cervical cancer, such as lipid-based nanocarriers, polymeric and dendrimeric nanoparticles, carbon-based nanoparticles, metallic nanoparticles, inorganic nanoparticles, micellar nanocarriers, and protein and polysaccharide nanoparticles. Nanoparticles have a great therapeutic potential by increasing the pharmacological activity, drug solubility, and bioavailability. Through their mechanisms, they highly increase the toxicity in the targeted cervical tumor cells or tissues by linking to specific ligands. In addition, a nondifferentiable model is proposed through holographic implementation in the dynamics of drug delivery dynamics. As any hologram functions as a deep learning process, the artificial intelligence can be proposed as a new analyzing method in cervical cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35571568 PMCID: PMC9095399 DOI: 10.1155/2022/1636908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.493
Figure 1Nanotechnology application in the treatment of cervical cancer (modified after Chen et al. [17]). HPV: human papilloma virus.
Figure 2Systemic drug delivery system in cervical cancer; Bio-NP: bionanoparticles.
Figure 3Localized drug delivery systems in cervical cancer.
Figure 4Enhanced dark field hyperspectral microscopy-control cervical tissue versus HPV 16 cervical tissue.