- 申有青 教授
- 浙江大學(xué)
- 網(wǎng)址: shenyq.polymer.cn 訪問量:552147
- 非EPR依賴型主動滲透納米藥物
- 發(fā)表的論文鏈接:
- 2015中國納米藥物國際會議(ChinaNanomedicine 2015)
- 中國聚合物網(wǎng)
- 中國流變網(wǎng)
- 中國化學(xué)儀器網(wǎng)
- 化學(xué)化工論壇
- 通信地址:杭州市浙大路38號第四教學(xué)大樓202A
- 郵編:310027
- 電話:0571-87953993
- 傳真:
- Email:[email protected]
關(guān)鍵字:納米藥物 腫瘤滲透 腫瘤蓄積 胞吞轉(zhuǎn)移
論文來源:期刊
發(fā)表時(shí)間:2020年
Nanotechnology-based drug delivery platforms have been explored for cancer treatments and resulted in several nanomedicines in clinical uses and many in clinical trials. However, current nanomedicines have not met the expected clinical therapeutic efficacy. Thus, improving therapeutic efficacy is the foremost pressing task of nanomedicine research. An effective nanomedicine must overcome biological barriers to go through at least five steps to deliver an effective drug into the cytosol of all the cancer cells in a tumor. Of these barriers, nanomedicine extravasation into and infiltration throughout the tumor are the two main unsolved blockages. Up to now, almost all the nanomedicines are designed to rely on the high permeability of tumor blood vessels to extravasate into tumor interstitium, i.e., the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect or so-called “passive tumor accumulation”; however, the EPR features are not so characteristic in human tumors as in the animal tumor models.
Following extravasation, the large size nanomedicines are almost motionless in the densely packed tumor microenvironment, making them restricted in the periphery of tumor blood vessels rather than infiltrating in the tumors and thus inaccessible to the distal but highly malignant cells. Recently, we demonstrated using nanocarriers to induce transcytosis of endothelial and cancer cells to enable nanomedicines to actively extravasate into and infiltrate in solid tumors, which led to radically increased anticancer activity. In this perspective, we make a brief discussion about how active transcytosis can be employed to overcome the difficulties, as mentioned above, and solve the inherent extravasation and infiltration dilemmas of nanomedicines.