Polymeric micelles and nanoemulsions as drug carriers: Therapeutic efficacy, toxicity, and drug resistance

被引:74
|
作者
Gupta, Roohi [1 ]
Shea, Jill [2 ]
Scafe, Courtney [2 ]
Shurlygina, Anna [3 ]
Rapoport, Natalya [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utah, Dept Bioengn, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
[2] Univ Utah, Dept Surg, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
[3] Russian Acad Med Sci, Siberian Branch, Inst Physiol & Fundamental Med, Moscow 109801, Russia
关键词
Polymeric micelles; Nanoemulsions; Paclitaxel; Tumor recurrence; Drug resistance; Hematological toxicity; Poly(ethylene oxide)-co-poly(L-lactide); Poly(ethylene oxide)-co-poly(D; L-lactide); BLOCK-COPOLYMER MICELLES; MULTICENTER PHASE-II; CREMOPHOR-FREE; GENEXOL-PM; DELIVERY; PACLITAXEL; CHEMOTHERAPY; CELLS; TRIAL; SHIFT;
D O I
10.1016/j.jconrel.2015.06.019
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The manuscript reports the side-by-side comparison of therapeutic properties of polymeric micelles and nanoemulsions generated from micelles. The effect of the structure of a hydrophobic block of block copolymer on the therapeutic efficacy, tumor recurrence, and development of drug resistance was studied in pancreatic tumor bearing mice. Mice were treated with paclitaxel (PTX) loaded poly(ethylene oxide)-co-polylactide micelles or corresponding perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions. Two structures of the polylactide block differing in a physical state of micelle cores or corresponding nanodroplet shells were compared. Poly(ethylene oxide)-co-poly(D,L-lactide) (PEG-PDLA) formed micelles with elastic amorphous cores while poly(ethylene oxide)-co-poly(L-lactide) (PEG-PLLA) formed micelles with solid crystalline cores. Micelles and nanoemulsions stabilized with PEG-PDLA copolymer manifested higher therapeutic efficacy than those formed with PEG-PLLA copolymer studied earlier. Better performance of PEG-PDLA micelles and nanodroplets was attributed to the elastic physical state of micelle cores (or droplet shells) allowing adequate rate of drug release via drug diffusion and/or copolymer biodegradation. The biodegradation of PEG-PDLA stabilized nanoemulsions was monitored by the ultrasonography of nanodroplets injected directly into the tumor; the PEG-PDLA stabilized nanodroplets disappeared from the injection site within 48 h. In contrast, nanodroplets stabilized with PEG-PLLA copolymer were preserved at the injection site for weeks and months indicating extremely slow biodegradation of solid PLLA blocks. Multiple injections of PTX-loaded PEG-PDLA micelles or nanoemulsions to pancreatic tumor bearing mice resulted in complete tumor resolution. Two of ten tumors treated with either PEG-PDLA micellar or nanoemulsion formulation recurred after the completion of treatment but proved sensitive to the second treatment cycle indicating that drug resistance has not been developed. This is in contrast to the treatment with PEG-PLLA micelles or nanoemulsions where all resolved tumors quickly recurred after the completion of treatment and proved resistant to the repeated treatment. The prevention of drug resistance in tumors treated with PEG-PDLA stabilized formulations was attributed to the presence and preventive effect of copolymer unimers that were in equilibrium with PEG-PDLA micelles. PEG-PDLA stabilized nanoemulsions manifested lower hematological toxicity than corresponding micelles suggesting higher drug retention in circulation. Summarizing, micelles with elastic cores appear preferable to those with solid cores as drug carriers. Micelles with elastic cores and corresponding nanoemulsions both manifest high therapeutic efficacy, with nanoemulsions exerting lower systemic toxicity than micelles. The presence of a small fraction of micelles with elastic cores in nanoemulsion formulations is desirable for prevention of the development of drug resistance. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:70 / 77
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Polymeric micelles for drug delivery
    Croy, S. R.
    Kwon, G. S.
    CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN, 2006, 12 (36) : 4669 - 4684
  • [22] Polymeric micelles for drug targeting
    Mahmud, Abdullah
    Xiong, Xiao-Bing
    Aliabadi, Hamidreza Montazeri
    Lavasanifar, Afsaneh
    JOURNAL OF DRUG TARGETING, 2007, 15 (09) : 553 - 584
  • [23] Drug Loading of Polymeric Micelles
    Tobias Miller
    Gwenaelle van Colen
    Bjoern Sander
    Mariola Monika Golas
    Senta Uezguen
    Markus Weigandt
    Achim Goepferich
    Pharmaceutical Research, 2013, 30 : 584 - 595
  • [24] Overcoming multiple drug resistance in cancer using polymeric micelles
    Kesharwani, Siddharth S.
    Kaur, Shamandeep
    Tummala, Hemachand
    Sangamwar, Abhay T.
    EXPERT OPINION ON DRUG DELIVERY, 2018, 15 (11) : 1127 - 1142
  • [25] Evaluation of Biosourced Alkyd Nanoemulsions as Drug Carriers
    Teo, Siew Yong
    Lee, Siang Yin
    Ong, Huey Lin
    Ong, Ching Lin
    Gan, Seng Neon
    Rathbone, Michael J.
    Coombes, Allan G. A.
    JOURNAL OF NANOMATERIALS, 2015, 2015
  • [26] POLYMERIC MICROSPHERES AS DRUG CARRIERS
    DAVIS, SS
    ILLUM, L
    BIOMATERIALS, 1988, 9 (01) : 111 - 115
  • [27] Polymeric micelles for anticancer drug delivery
    Majumder, Nairrita
    Das, Nandita G.
    Das, Sudip K.
    THERAPEUTIC DELIVERY, 2020, 11 (10) : 613 - 635
  • [28] Polymeric micelles for acyclovir drug delivery
    Sawdon, Alicia J.
    Peng, Ching-An
    COLLOIDS AND SURFACES B-BIOINTERFACES, 2014, 122 : 738 - 745
  • [29] Core crosslinkable polymeric micelles from PEG-lipid amphiphiles as drug carriers
    Tian, L
    Yam, L
    Wang, JZ
    Tat, H
    Uhrich, KE
    JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY, 2004, 14 (14) : 2317 - 2324
  • [30] Polymeric micelles for oral drug delivery
    Gaucher, Genevieve
    Satturwar, Prashant
    Jones, Marie-Christine
    Furtos, Alexandra
    Leroux, Jean-Christophe
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS AND BIOPHARMACEUTICS, 2010, 76 (02) : 147 - 158