Nance Elizabeth, Zhang Clark, Shih Ting-Yu, Xu Qingguo, Schuster Benjamin S, Hanes Justin
Center for Nanomedicine at the Wilmer Eye Institute, ‡Department of Biomedical Engineering, ∥Department of Ophthalmology, #Deparments of Oncology, Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences, and Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland 21231, United States.
ACS Nano. 2014 Oct 28;8(10):10655-64. doi: 10.1021/nn504210g. Epub 2014 Oct 8.
Poor drug distribution and short drug half-life within tumors strongly limit efficacy of chemotherapies in most cancers, including primary brain tumors. Local or targeted drug delivery via controlled-release polymers is a promising strategy to treat infiltrative brain tumors, which cannot be completely removed surgically. However, drug penetration is limited with conventional local therapies since small-molecule drugs often enter the first cell they encounter and travel only short distances from the site of administration. Nanoparticles that avoid adhesive interactions with the tumor extracellular matrix may improve drug distribution and sustain drug release when applied to the tumor area. We have previously shown model polystyrene nanoparticles up to 114 nm in diameter were able to rapidly diffuse in normal brain tissue, but only if coated with an exceptionally dense layer of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) to reduce adhesive interactions. Here, we demonstrate that paclitaxel (PTX)-loaded, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA)-co-PEG block copolymer nanoparticles with an average diameter of 70 nm were able to diffuse 100-fold faster than similarly sized PTX-loaded PLGA particles (without PEG coatings). Densely PEGylated PTX-loaded nanoparticles significantly delayed tumor growth following local administration to established brain tumors, as compared to PTX-loaded PLGA nanoparticles or unencapsulated PTX. Delayed tumor growth combined with enhanced distribution of drug-loaded PLGA-PEG nanoparticles to the tumor infiltrative front demonstrates that particle penetration within the brain tumor parenchyma improves therapeutic efficacy. The use of drug-loaded brain-penetrating nanoparticles is a promising approach to achieve sustained and more uniform drug delivery to treat aggressive gliomas and potentially other brain disorders.
在大多数癌症(包括原发性脑肿瘤)中,药物在肿瘤内分布不佳以及药物半衰期短,这严重限制了化疗的疗效。通过控释聚合物进行局部或靶向给药是治疗浸润性脑肿瘤的一种有前景的策略,这类肿瘤无法通过手术完全切除。然而,传统局部治疗的药物渗透有限,因为小分子药物通常进入它们遇到的第一个细胞,并且仅从给药部位短距离扩散。避免与肿瘤细胞外基质发生粘附相互作用的纳米颗粒在应用于肿瘤区域时可能会改善药物分布并维持药物释放。我们之前已经表明,直径达114纳米的聚苯乙烯纳米颗粒模型能够在正常脑组织中快速扩散,但前提是要包裹一层特别致密的聚乙二醇(PEG)以减少粘附相互作用。在此,我们证明,平均直径为70纳米、负载紫杉醇(PTX)的聚乳酸 - 乙醇酸共聚物(PLGA) - 共 - PEG嵌段共聚物纳米颗粒扩散速度比同样大小但未包裹PEG的负载PTX的PLGA颗粒快100倍。与负载PTX的PLGA纳米颗粒或未封装的PTX相比,局部给药至已形成的脑肿瘤后,高度聚乙二醇化的负载PTX纳米颗粒显著延缓了肿瘤生长。肿瘤生长延迟以及载药PLGA - PEG纳米颗粒向肿瘤浸润前沿的分布增强表明,纳米颗粒在脑肿瘤实质内的渗透提高了治疗效果。使用载药的脑穿透纳米颗粒是一种有前景的方法,可实现持续且更均匀的药物递送,以治疗侵袭性胶质瘤以及可能的其他脑部疾病。