Litcius/Paper detail

Nose-to-Brain Delivery of Cancer-Targeting Paclitaxel-Loaded Nanoparticles Potentiates Antitumor Effects in Malignant Glioblastoma

Irfan Ullah, Kunho Chung, Sumin Bae, Yan Li, Chunggu Kim, Bo-Young Choi, Hye Yeong Nam, Sun Hwa Kim, Chae‐Ok Yun, Kuen Yong Lee, Priti Kumar, Sang‐Kyung Lee

2020Molecular Pharmaceutics70 citationsDOI

Abstract

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is an aggressive tumor with no curative treatment. The tumor recurrence after resection often requires chemotherapy or radiation to delay the infiltration of tumor remnants. Intracerebral chemotherapies are preferentially being used to prevent tumor regrowth, but treatments remain unsuccessful because of the poor drug distribution in the brain. In this study, we investigated the therapeutic efficacy of cancer-targeting arginyl-glycyl-aspartic tripeptide (RGD) conjugated paclitaxel (PTX)-loaded nanoparticles (NPs) against GBM by nose-to-brain delivery. Our results demonstrated that RGD-modified PTX-loaded NPs showed cancer-specific delivery and enhanced anticancer effects in vivo. The intranasal (IN) inoculation of RGD-PTX-loaded NPs effectively controls the tumor burden (75 ± 12% reduction) by inducing apoptosis and/or inhibiting cancer cell proliferation without affecting the G0 stage of normal brain cells. Our data provide therapeutic evidence supporting the use of intranasally delivered cancer-targeted PTX-loaded NPs for GBM therapy.

Topics & Concepts

PaclitaxelMedicineDrug deliveryNasal administrationGliomaCancer researchIn vivoPharmacologyChemotherapyBrain tumorRadiation therapyCancerChemistryPathologyInternal medicineBiologyBiotechnologyOrganic chemistryRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryAdvanced Drug Delivery SystemsNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics