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Theresa M. Allen

Kanazawa University

Publishes on Nanoparticle-Based Drug Delivery, RNA Interference and Gene Delivery, Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research. 265 papers and 32.8k citations.

265Publications
32.8kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Drug Delivery Systems: Entering the Mainstream
Cited by 4.5k

Drug delivery systems (DDS) such as lipid- or polymer-based nanoparticles can be designed to improve the pharmacological and therapeutic properties of drugs administered parenterally. Many of the early problems that hindered the clinical applications of particulate DDS have been overcome, with several DDS formulations of anticancer and antifungal drugs now approved for clinical use. Furthermore, there is considerable interest in exploiting the advantages of DDS for in vivo delivery of new drugs derived from proteomics or genomics research and for their use in ligand-targeted therapeutics.

Sterically stabilized liposomes: improvements in pharmacokinetics and antitumor therapeutic efficacy.
Demetrios Papahadjopoulos, Theresa M. Allen, Alberto Gabizón et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1991
Cited by 1.6kOpen Access

The results obtained in this study establish that liposome formulations incorporating a synthetic polyethylene glycol-derivatized phospholipid have a pronounced effect on liposome tissue distribution and can produce a large increase in the pharmacological efficacy of encapsulated antitumor drugs. This effect is substantially greater than that observed previously with conventional liposomes and is associated with a more than 5-fold prolongation of liposome circulation time in blood, a marked decrease in uptake by tissues such as liver and spleen, and a corresponding increased accumulation in implanted tumors. These and other properties described here have expanded considerably the prospects of liposomes as an effective carrier system for a variety of pharmacologically active macromolecules.