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A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs

[Image: see text] Chemotherapy is almost exclusively administered via the intravenous (IV) route, which has serious limitations (e.g., patient discomfort, long hospital stays, need for trained staff, high cost, catheter failures, infections). Therefore, the development of effective and less costly c...

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Autores principales: Bordat, Alexandre, Boissenot, Tanguy, Ibrahim, Nada, Ferrere, Marianne, Levêque, Manon, Potiron, Léa, Denis, Stéphanie, Garcia-Argote, Sébastien, Carvalho, Olivia, Abadie, Jérôme, Cailleau, Catherine, Pieters, Grégory, Tsapis, Nicolas, Nicolas, Julien
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9585574/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36193551
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c04944
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author Bordat, Alexandre
Boissenot, Tanguy
Ibrahim, Nada
Ferrere, Marianne
Levêque, Manon
Potiron, Léa
Denis, Stéphanie
Garcia-Argote, Sébastien
Carvalho, Olivia
Abadie, Jérôme
Cailleau, Catherine
Pieters, Grégory
Tsapis, Nicolas
Nicolas, Julien
author_facet Bordat, Alexandre
Boissenot, Tanguy
Ibrahim, Nada
Ferrere, Marianne
Levêque, Manon
Potiron, Léa
Denis, Stéphanie
Garcia-Argote, Sébastien
Carvalho, Olivia
Abadie, Jérôme
Cailleau, Catherine
Pieters, Grégory
Tsapis, Nicolas
Nicolas, Julien
author_sort Bordat, Alexandre
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Chemotherapy is almost exclusively administered via the intravenous (IV) route, which has serious limitations (e.g., patient discomfort, long hospital stays, need for trained staff, high cost, catheter failures, infections). Therefore, the development of effective and less costly chemotherapy that is more comfortable for the patient would revolutionize cancer therapy. While subcutaneous (SC) administration has the potential to meet these criteria, it is extremely restrictive as it cannot be applied to most anticancer drugs, such as irritant or vesicant ones, for local toxicity reasons. Herein, we report a facile, general, and scalable approach for the SC administration of anticancer drugs through the design of well-defined hydrophilic polymer prodrugs. This was applied to the anticancer drug paclitaxel (Ptx) as a worst-case scenario due to its high hydrophobicity and vesicant properties (two factors promoting necrosis at the injection site). After a preliminary screening of well-established polymers used in nanomedicine, polyacrylamide (PAAm) was chosen as a hydrophilic polymer owing to its greater physicochemical, pharmacokinetic, and tumor accumulation properties. A small library of Ptx-based polymer prodrugs was designed by adjusting the nature of the linker (ester, diglycolate, and carbonate) and then evaluated in terms of rheological/viscosity properties in aqueous solutions, drug release kinetics in PBS and in murine plasma, cytotoxicity on two different cancer cell lines, acute local and systemic toxicity, pharmacokinetics and biodistribution, and finally their anticancer efficacy. We demonstrated that Ptx-PAAm polymer prodrugs could be safely injected subcutaneously without inducing local toxicity while outperforming Taxol, the commercial formulation of Ptx, thus opening the door to the safe transposition from IV to SC chemotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-95855742022-10-22 A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs Bordat, Alexandre Boissenot, Tanguy Ibrahim, Nada Ferrere, Marianne Levêque, Manon Potiron, Léa Denis, Stéphanie Garcia-Argote, Sébastien Carvalho, Olivia Abadie, Jérôme Cailleau, Catherine Pieters, Grégory Tsapis, Nicolas Nicolas, Julien J Am Chem Soc [Image: see text] Chemotherapy is almost exclusively administered via the intravenous (IV) route, which has serious limitations (e.g., patient discomfort, long hospital stays, need for trained staff, high cost, catheter failures, infections). Therefore, the development of effective and less costly chemotherapy that is more comfortable for the patient would revolutionize cancer therapy. While subcutaneous (SC) administration has the potential to meet these criteria, it is extremely restrictive as it cannot be applied to most anticancer drugs, such as irritant or vesicant ones, for local toxicity reasons. Herein, we report a facile, general, and scalable approach for the SC administration of anticancer drugs through the design of well-defined hydrophilic polymer prodrugs. This was applied to the anticancer drug paclitaxel (Ptx) as a worst-case scenario due to its high hydrophobicity and vesicant properties (two factors promoting necrosis at the injection site). After a preliminary screening of well-established polymers used in nanomedicine, polyacrylamide (PAAm) was chosen as a hydrophilic polymer owing to its greater physicochemical, pharmacokinetic, and tumor accumulation properties. A small library of Ptx-based polymer prodrugs was designed by adjusting the nature of the linker (ester, diglycolate, and carbonate) and then evaluated in terms of rheological/viscosity properties in aqueous solutions, drug release kinetics in PBS and in murine plasma, cytotoxicity on two different cancer cell lines, acute local and systemic toxicity, pharmacokinetics and biodistribution, and finally their anticancer efficacy. We demonstrated that Ptx-PAAm polymer prodrugs could be safely injected subcutaneously without inducing local toxicity while outperforming Taxol, the commercial formulation of Ptx, thus opening the door to the safe transposition from IV to SC chemotherapy. American Chemical Society 2022-10-04 2022-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9585574/ /pubmed/36193551 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c04944 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Bordat, Alexandre
Boissenot, Tanguy
Ibrahim, Nada
Ferrere, Marianne
Levêque, Manon
Potiron, Léa
Denis, Stéphanie
Garcia-Argote, Sébastien
Carvalho, Olivia
Abadie, Jérôme
Cailleau, Catherine
Pieters, Grégory
Tsapis, Nicolas
Nicolas, Julien
A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs
title A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs
title_full A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs
title_fullStr A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs
title_full_unstemmed A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs
title_short A Polymer Prodrug Strategy to Switch from Intravenous to Subcutaneous Cancer Therapy for Irritant/Vesicant Drugs
title_sort polymer prodrug strategy to switch from intravenous to subcutaneous cancer therapy for irritant/vesicant drugs
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9585574/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36193551
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c04944
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