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Nanocarrier-based drug delivery systems for bone cancer therapy: a review

S. Ram Prasad, T. S. Sampath Kumar, A. Jayakrishnan

2021Biomedical Materials29 citationsDOI

Abstract

Bone cancer is a malignant tumor that originates in the bone and destroys the healthy bone tissues. Of the various types of bone tumors, osteosarcoma is the most commonly diagnosed primary bone malignancy. The standard treatment for primary malignant bone tumors comprises surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Owing to the lack of proven treatments, different forms of alternative therapeutic approaches have been examined in recent decades. Among the new therapeutic methodologies, nanotechnology-based anticancer therapy has paved the way for new targeted strategies for bone cancer treatment and bone regeneration. They include approaches such as the co-delivery of multiple drug cargoes, the enhancement of their biodistribution and transport properties, normalizing accumulation and the optimization of drug release profiles to overcome shortcomings of the existing therapy. This review examines the standard treatments for osteosarcoma, their lacunae, and the evolving therapeutic strategies based on nanocarrier-mediated combinational drug delivery systems, and future perspectives for osteosarcoma therapy.

Topics & Concepts

NanocarriersMedicineOsteosarcomaDrug deliveryBone cancerRadiation therapyCancerDrugMalignancyCancer therapyChemotherapyBiodistributionCancer researchOncologyPharmacologyPathologyInternal medicineMaterials scienceNanotechnologyIn vivoBiologyBiotechnologyNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryBone Tissue Engineering MaterialsNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics
Nanocarrier-based drug delivery systems for bone cancer therapy: a review | Litcius