Publication | Closed Access
Use of Nanoparticles for Cerebral Cancer
131
Citations
34
References
2008
Year
NanoparticlesNeuro-oncologyNanomedicineCerebral CancerEngineeringPolymer-drug ConjugateMedicineButyl CyanoacrylateNano-drug DeliveryTumor TargetingNeurologyHigh-grade GliomasBiomedical EngineeringDrug TransportPharmacologyGliomaTumor MicroenvironmentPoloxamer 188
Nanoparticles made of poly(butyl cyanoacrylate) (PBCA) or poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) coated with polysorbate 80 or poloxamer 188 enable the transport of cytostatics such as doxorubicin across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Following intravenous injection to rats bearing intracranially the very aggressive glioblastoma 101/8 these particles loaded with doxorubicin significantly increased the survival times and led to a complete tumor remission in 20-40% of the animals. Moreover, these particles considerably reduced the dose-limiting cardiotoxicity and also the testicular toxicity of this drug. The drug transport across the BBB by nanoparticles appears to be due to a receptor-mediated interaction with the brain capillary endothelial cells, which is facilitated by certain plasma apolipoproteins adsorbed by nanoparticles in the blood.
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