Ultrasmall Nanoparticle Delivery of Doxorubicin Improves Therapeutic Index for High-Grade Glioma

Clin Cancer Res. 2022 Jul 1;28(13):2938-2952. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-4053.

Abstract

Purpose: Despite dramatic growth in the number of small-molecule drugs developed to treat solid tumors, durable therapeutic options to control primary central nervous system malignancies are relatively scarce. Chemotherapeutic agents that appear biologically potent in model systems have often been found to be marginally effective at best when given systemically in clinical trials. This work presents for the first time an ultrasmall (<8 nm) multimodal core-shell silica nanoparticle, Cornell prime dots (or C' dots), for the efficacious treatment of high-grade gliomas.

Experimental design: This work presents first-in-kind renally clearable ultrasmall (<8 nm) multimodal C' dots with surface-conjugated doxorubicin (DOX) via pH-sensitive linkers for the efficacious treatment in two different clinically relevant high-grade glioma models.

Results: Optimal drug-per-particle ratios of as-developed nanoparticle-drug conjugates were established and used to obtain favorable pharmacokinetic profiles. The in vivo efficacy results showed significantly improved biological, therapeutic, and toxicological properties over the native drug after intravenous administration in platelet-derived growth factor-driven genetically engineered mouse model, and an EGF-expressing patient-derived xenograft (EGFR PDX) model.

Conclusions: Ultrasmall C' dot-drug conjugates showed great translational potential over DOX for improving the therapeutic outcome of patients with high-grade gliomas, even without a cancer-targeting moiety.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cell Line, Tumor
  • Doxorubicin
  • Drug Delivery Systems / methods
  • Glioma* / drug therapy
  • Humans
  • Mice
  • Nanoparticles*
  • Silicon Dioxide
  • Therapeutic Index

Substances

  • Silicon Dioxide
  • Doxorubicin