AI Article Synopsis

  • The capillary wall acts as a primary barrier for therapeutic nanoparticles, influencing their effectiveness in delivering medicine.
  • A study using computations and live models revealed that the structure of collagen in capillary walls impacts how easily chemotherapy particles, like doxorubicin and pegylated liposomes, can penetrate tumor tissues.
  • The research concluded that the amount of collagen around tumor blood vessels correlates with the ability of liposomes to escape circulation, suggesting collagen could be a useful marker for assessing how well these drug formulations can infiltrate tumors based on their specific characteristics.

Article Abstract

The capillary wall is the chief barrier to tissue entry of therapeutic nanoparticles, thereby dictating their efficacy. Collagen fibers are an important component of capillary walls, affecting leakiness in healthy or tumor vasculature. Using a computational model along with in vivo systems, we compared how collagen structure affects the diffusion flux of a 1-nm chemotherapeutic molecule [doxorubicin (DOX)] and an 80-nm chemotherapy-loaded pegylated liposome (DOX-PLD) in tumor vasculature. We found a direct correlation between the collagen content around a tumor vessel to the permeability of that vessel permeability to DOX-PLD, indicating that collagen content may offer a biophysical marker of extravasation potential of liposomal drug formulations. Our results also suggested that while pharmacokinetics determined the delivery of DOX and DOX-PLD to the same tumor phenotype, collagen content determined the extravasation of DOX-PLD to different tumor phenotypes. Transport physics may provide a deeper view into how nanotherapeutics cross biological barriers, possibly helping explain the balance between biological and physical aspects of drug delivery.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4134692PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-3494DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The capillary wall acts as a primary barrier for therapeutic nanoparticles, influencing their effectiveness in delivering medicine.
  • A study using computations and live models revealed that the structure of collagen in capillary walls impacts how easily chemotherapy particles, like doxorubicin and pegylated liposomes, can penetrate tumor tissues.
  • The research concluded that the amount of collagen around tumor blood vessels correlates with the ability of liposomes to escape circulation, suggesting collagen could be a useful marker for assessing how well these drug formulations can infiltrate tumors based on their specific characteristics.
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