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Publication | Open Access

Nanoparticle-Encapsulated Doxorubicin Demonstrates Superior Tumor Cell Kill in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Subtypes Intrinsically Resistant to Doxorubicin

21

Citations

18

References

2018

Year

Abstract

The effect of size and release kinetics of doxorubicin-nanoparticles on anti-tumor efficacy was evaluated in a panel of human cancer cell lines, including triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells that frequently demonstrate resistance to doxorubicin. Different nano-formulations of sol-gel-based Doxorubicin containing nanoparticles were synthesized. Increased cell kill in chemoreffactory triple-negative breast cancer cells was associated with the smallest size of nanoparticles and the slowest release of Dox. Modeling of dose-response parameters in Dox-sensitive versus Dox-resistant lines demonstrated increased E<sub>Max</sub> and area under the curve in Dox-resistant mesenchymal TNBC cells, implying potentially favorable activity in this molecular subtype of breast cancer. Mesenchymal TNBC cells demonstrated a high rate of fluorescent bead uptake suggestive of increased endocytosis, which may partially account for the enhanced efficacy of Dox-np in this subtype. Thus, manipulation of size and release kinetics of this nanoparticle platform is associated with enhanced dose-response metrics and tumor cell kill in therapeutically recalcitrant TNBC cell models. This platform is easily customizable and warrants further exploration.

References

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