Doxorubicin-induced co-assembling nanomedicines with temperature-sensitive acidic polymer and their in-situ-forming hydrogels for intratumoral administration

Journal of Controlled Release(2016)

引用 42|浏览13
暂无评分
摘要
Doxorubicin (DOX)-induced co-assembling nanomedicines (D-PNAx) with temperature-sensitive PNAx triblock polymers have been developed for regional chemotherapy against liver cancer via intratumoral administration in the present work. Owing to the formation of insoluble DOX carboxylate, D-PNAx nanomedicines showed high drug-loading and entrapment efficacy via a simple mixing of doxorubicin hydrochloride and PNAx polymers. The sustained releasing profile of D-PNA100 nanomedicines indicated that only 9.4% of DOX was released within 1day, and 60% was released during 10days. Based on DOX-induced co-assembling behavior and their temperature sensitive in-situ-forming hydrogels, D-PNA100 nanomedicines showed excellent antitumor activity against H22 tumor using intratumoral administration. In contrast to that by free DOX solution (1.13±0.04 times at 9days) and blank PNA100 (2.11±0.34 times), the tumor volume treated by D-PNA100 had been falling to only 0.77±0.13 times of original tumor volume throughout the experimental period. In vivo biodistribution of DOX indicated that D-PNA100 nanomedicines exhibited much stronger DOX retention in tumor tissues than free DOX solution via intratumoral injection. D-PNA100 nanomedicines were hopeful to be developed as new temperature sensitive in-situ-forming hydrogels via i.t. injection for regional chemotherapy.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Co-assembling,Temperature sensitive,Nanomedicines,In-situ-forming hydrogels,Intratumoral injection)
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要