AI Article Synopsis

  • Intravenous delivery of nanocarriers often results in issues like off-target distribution and rapid clearance, which reduces their effectiveness against tumors.
  • An injectable hydrogel is developed that enhances its viscosity over time and temperature, allowing it to remain at the tumor site and is loaded with cancer cell membranes and a drug called sorafenib to promote immune responses and kill cancer cells.
  • The hydrogel incorporates hyaluronic acid-coated nanorods, enabling prolonged local photothermal therapy and reducing diffusion to surrounding areas, resulting in significant tumor regression and antibacterial properties to minimize infection risks.

Article Abstract

Intravenously administered nanocarriers suffer from off-target distribution, pre-targeting drug leakage, and rapid clearance, limiting their efficiency in tumor eradication. To bypass these challenges, an injectable hydrogel with time- and temperature-dependent viscosity enhancement behavior and self-healing property are reported to assist in the retention of the hydrogel in the tumor site after injection. The cancer cell membrane (CCM) and sorafenib are embedded into the hydrogel to elicit local tumor-specific immune responses and induce cancer cell apoptosis, respectively. In addition, hyaluronic acid (HA) coated BiS nanorods (BiH) are incorporated within the hydrogel to afford prolonged multi-cycle local photothermal therapy (PTT) due to the reduced diffusion of the nanorods to the surrounding tissues as a result of HA affinity toward cancer cells. The results show the promotion of immunostimulatory responses by both CCM and PTT through the release of inflammatory cytokines from immune cells, which allows localized and complete ablation of the breast tumor in an animal model by a single injection of the hydrogel. Moreover, the BiH renders strong antibacterial activity to the hydrogel, which is crucial for the clinical translation of injectable hydrogels as it minimizes the risk of infection in the post-cancer lesion formed by PTT-mediated cancer therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10034508PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mtbio.2023.100609DOI Listing

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