Anup Neelima, Gadeval Anuradha, Tekade Rakesh Kumar
National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPER), Ahmedabad, An Institute of National Importance, Government of India, Department of Pharmaceuticals, Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers, Palaj, Opp. Air force station, Gandhinagar 382355, Gujarat, India.
ACS Appl Bio Mater. 2023 Mar 20;6(3):1195-1212. doi: 10.1021/acsabm.2c01031. Epub 2023 Mar 9.
Three-dimensional printing is an emerging technology that is finding its niche applications in diverse fields owing to its flexibility concerning personalization and design. Surgery followed by adjuvant therapy is the standard treatment plan in most cancers from stage I to stage III. Most of the available adjuvant therapies, like chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy, hormonal therapy, etc., are associated with severe side effects that considerably reduce the quality of life of patients. In addition, there is always the chance of tumor recurrence or metastasis development followed by surgery. This investigation reports the development of a 3D-printed, biodegradable, laser-responsive implant with a chemo-combined thermal ablating potential for adjuvant therapy of cancer. The 3D-printable ink was developed using poly(l-lactide) and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose as the base polymer, doxorubicin as the chemotherapeutic agent, and reduced graphene oxide as the photothermal ablating agent. The personalized implant released the drug pH-dependently ( value < 0.0001) for an extended period (93.55 ± 1.80% → 28 days). The 3D-printed implant exhibited acceptable biophysical properties (tensile strength: 3.85 ± 0.15 MPa; modulus: 92.37 ± 11.50 MPa; thickness: 110 μm) with laser-responsive hyperthermia (Δ: 37 ± 0.9 °C → 48.5 ± 1.07 °C; 5 min; 1.5 W/cm) and inherent biodegradable property (SEM analysis). The 3D-printed implant was evaluated for its therapeutic potential in 2D- and 3D-spheroid tumor models (MDA-MB 231 and SCC 084 2D cells) employing MTT cytotoxicity assay, apoptosis assay, cell cycle analysis, and gene expression analysis. The biomolecular aspects and biomechanics of the 3D-printed BioFuse implant were also evaluated by determining the effect of treatment on the expression levels of HSP1A, Hsp70, BAX, and PTEN. It is advocated that the knowledge developed in this project will significantly assist and advance the science aiming to develop a clinically translatable postsurgical adjuvant therapy for cancer.
三维打印是一项新兴技术,由于其在个性化和设计方面的灵活性,正在不同领域找到其利基应用。手术加辅助治疗是大多数I期至III期癌症的标准治疗方案。大多数现有的辅助治疗方法,如化疗、放疗、免疫治疗、激素治疗等,都伴有严重的副作用,这大大降低了患者的生活质量。此外,手术后总是存在肿瘤复发或转移发展的可能性。本研究报告了一种用于癌症辅助治疗的具有化学联合热消融潜力的3D打印可生物降解激光响应植入物的开发。使用聚(L-丙交酯)和羟丙基甲基纤维素作为基础聚合物、阿霉素作为化疗药物、还原氧化石墨烯作为光热消融剂开发了3D可打印墨水。个性化植入物在较长时间内(93.55±1.80%→28天)以pH依赖性方式释放药物(值<0.0001)。3D打印植入物表现出可接受的生物物理特性(拉伸强度:3.85±0.15MPa;模量:92.37±11.50MPa;厚度:110μm),具有激光响应热疗(Δ:37±0.9°C→48.5±1.07°C;5分钟;1.5W/cm)和固有生物可降解特性(扫描电子显微镜分析)。使用MTT细胞毒性测定、凋亡测定、细胞周期分析和基因表达分析,在2D和3D球体肿瘤模型(MDA-MB 231和SCC 084 2D细胞)中评估了3D打印植入物的治疗潜力。还通过确定治疗对HSP1A、Hsp70、BAX和PTEN表达水平的影响,评估了3D打印BioFuse植入物的生物分子方面和生物力学。有人主张,该项目中开发的知识将显著有助于并推动旨在开发临床上可转化的癌症术后辅助治疗的科学发展。