Recently, clinical research on tumor therapy has gradually shifted from traditional monotherapy toward combination therapy as tumors are complex, diverse, and heterogeneous. Combination therapy may be essential for achieving the optimized treatment efficacy of tumors through distinct tumor-inhibiting mechanisms. At the same time, nanocarriers are emerging as an excellent strategy for delivering both drugs simultaneously. This work presents utilization of a polyphosphoester-based nanocarrier (NP) to achieve the codelivery of hydrophobic photothermal agent IR-780 and radiosensitizer curcumin (Cur). The IR-780 and curcumin coencapsulated NP exhibited adequate drug loading, a prolonged blood half-life, enhanced passive tumor homing, and improved curcumin bioavailability as well as combined therapeutic functions. Briefly, NP could not only achieve effective thermal ablation through the conversion of near-infrared light to heat, but also give rise to a significant boosted local radiation dose to trigger promoted radiation damages, thus resulting in enhanced tumor cell growth inhibition. In conclusion, the as-prepared NP manifested excellent performance in facilitating combined photothermal and radiation therapy, thus expanding the application range of PPE-based carriers in nanomedicine, and also prompting exploration of their potential for other effective combination therapies.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsbiomaterials.9b00051 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!