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DR ANTHONY MELVIN CRASTO, WORLDDRUGTRACKER

One-Two Nanopunch For Difficult-To-Treat Breast Cancer Drug Delivery: Layered nanoparticles deliver a gene silencer and a drug to shrink tumors

 cancer, drug delivery  Comments Off on One-Two Nanopunch For Difficult-To-Treat Breast Cancer Drug Delivery: Layered nanoparticles deliver a gene silencer and a drug to shrink tumors
Apr 212014
 
Illustration of layer-by-layer synthesis of nanoparticles for treating breast cancer tumors

Double Duty
To deliver a one-two nanopunch to triple-negative breast cancer tumors, researchers start with a lipid-coated sphere filled with the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin (left). Then they add alternating layers of poly-L-arginine and an siRNA sequence (center), capped off by a layer of hyaluronic acid (right), which disguises the particle from the body’s immune system.
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Women with triple-negative breast cancer, a rare but aggressive form of the disease, often find that it is difficult to treat. An early diagnosis allows more treatment options, but women with this type of cancer generally have a lower survival rate than those with other types of breast cancers. To tackle the disease, a team of researchers has developed a nanomedicine that delivers a one-two punch to tumors that weakens their defenses and obliterates them (ACS Nano 2013, DOI: 10.1021/nn4047925).
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Nanoparticles Deliver Three Cancer Drugs To Tumors Drug Delivery: Polymeric materials deliver specific amounts of multiple drugs to disease cells

 nanotechnology  Comments Off on Nanoparticles Deliver Three Cancer Drugs To Tumors Drug Delivery: Polymeric materials deliver specific amounts of multiple drugs to disease cells
Apr 212014
 
Graphic show that a nanoparticle with cisplatin core (green) is formed by polymerization of doxorubicin- and camptothecin-derivatized monomers and a cisplatin cross-linker.

CANCER KILLER
A drug-delivering nanoparticle with cisplatin core (green) is formed by polymerization of doxorubicin- and camptothecin-derivatized monomers and a cisplatin cross-linker.
The first polymer nanoparticles that carry a defined ratio of three cancer drugs and release them with three independent triggering mechanisms have been developed. The approach could provide a new way of delivering specific amounts of multiple drugs to patients and could help researchers optimize doses of such combination therapies.
The drug delivery nanoparticles were developed by Jeremiah A. Johnson of MIT and coworkers (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, DOI: 10.1021/ja502011g).
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