Tumor-Targeted Hyaluronan Nanoliposomes Increase the Antitumor Activity of Liposomal Doxorubicin in Syngeneic and Human Xenograft Mouse Tumor Models

Dan Peer(Tel Aviv University), Rimona Margalit
Neoplasia
July 1, 2004
Cited by 210Open Access
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Abstract

Naturally occurring high-Mr hyaluronan, bound to the surface of nanoliposomes (denoted targeted hyaluronan liposomes, or tHA-LIP), is a candidate for active targeting to tumors, many of which overexpress the hyaluronan receptors CD44 and RHAMM. The surface-bound hyaluronan also provides a hydrophilic coat that, similar to polyethylene glycol, may promote long-term circulation. We recently reported the successful targeting of mitomycin C, mediated by tHA-LIP, in tumor-bearing syngeneic mice. Hypothesizing that this targeting is carrier-specific, rather than drug-specific, we report here studies with doxorubicin (DXR)-loaded tHA-LIP, in syngeneic and human xenograft models. Saline, free DXR, DXR-loaded nontargeted liposomes (nt-LIP), and Doxil served as controls. The tHA-LIP were long-circulating, more than all controls, in healthy and tumor-bearing (C57BL/6/B16F10.9; BALB/c/C-26) mice. Mediated by tHA-LIP, DXR accumulation in tumor-bearing lungs was 30-, 6.7-, and 3.5-fold higher than free DXR, nt-LIP, and Doxil, respectively. Key indicators of therapeutic responses--tumor progression, metastatic burden, and survival--were superior (P < .001) in animals receiving DXR-loaded tHA-LIP compared with controls, in tumor-bearing syngeneic mice (BDF1/P388/ADR ascites, C57BL/6/B16F10.9 lung metastasis, and BALB/c/C-26 solid tumors), and in nude mice bearing PANC-1 solid tumors. In conclusion, tHA-LIP, performing as tumor-targeted carriers, have the potential to join the arsenal of carrier-formulated anticancer drugs.


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