1. Academic Validation
  2. Controlled destabilization of a liposomal drug delivery system enhances mitoxantrone antitumor activity

Controlled destabilization of a liposomal drug delivery system enhances mitoxantrone antitumor activity

  • Nat Biotechnol. 1999 Aug;17(8):775-9. doi: 10.1038/11710.
G Adlakha-Hutcheon 1 M B Bally C R Shew T D Madden
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z3.
PMID: 10429242 DOI: 10.1038/11710
Abstract

Programmable fusogenic vesicles (PFVs) are lipid-based drug-delivery systems that exhibit time-dependent destabilization. The rate at which this destabilization occurs is determined by the exchange rate of a bilayer-stabilizing component, polyethylene glycol-phosphatidylethanolamine (PEG-PE) from the vesicle surface. This exchange rate is controlled, in turn, by the acyl chain composition of the PEG-PE. We describe in vitro and in vivo studies using PFVs as delivery vehicles for the Anticancer drug mitoxantrone. We demonstrate that the PEG-PE acyl composition determined the rate at which PFVs are eliminated from plasma after intravenous administration, and the rate of mitoxantrone leakage from PFV. The nature of the PEG-PE component also determined the antitumor efficacy of mitoxantrone-loaded PFV in murine and human in murine and human xenograft tumor models. Increased circulation time and improved activity were obtained for PFV containing PEG-PE with an 18-carbon acyl chain length, as a result of slower vesicle destabilization.

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