Abstract

The blood vessels of cancerous tumours are leaky and poorly organized. This can increase the interstitial fluid pressure inside tumours and reduce blood supply to them, which impairs drug delivery. Anti-angiogenic therapies--which 'normalize' the abnormal blood vessels in tumours by making them less leaky--have been shown to improve the delivery and effectiveness of chemotherapeutics with low molecular weights, but it remains unclear whether normalizing tumour vessels can improve the delivery of nanomedicines. Here, we show that repairing the abnormal vessels in mammary tumours, by blocking vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2, improves the delivery of smaller nanoparticles (diameter, 12 nm) while hindering the delivery of larger nanoparticles (diameter, 125 nm). Using a mathematical model, we show that reducing the sizes of pores in the walls of vessels through normalization decreases the interstitial fluid pressure in tumours, thus allowing small nanoparticles to enter them more rapidly. However, increased steric and hydrodynamic hindrances, also associated with smaller pores, make it more difficult for large nanoparticles to enter tumours. Our results further suggest that smaller (∼12 nm) nanomedicines are ideal for cancer therapy due to their superior tumour penetration.

Highlights

  • To determine how vascular normalization affects nanomedicine delivery, we studied whether the anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-receptor-2 antibody DC101 modulates nanoparticle penetration rates in orthotopic mammary tumours in vivo

  • To study how changes in vascular pore size distribution can bring about this complex sizedependent improvement in nanoparticle penetration rates, we developed a mathematical model of drug delivery to tumours

  • We studied how changes in the mean and heterogeneity of the vascular pore size distribution affect fluid pressure profiles and drug delivery in tumours

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Summary

Introduction

To study how changes in vascular pore size distribution can bring about this complex sizedependent improvement in nanoparticle penetration rates, we developed a mathematical model of drug delivery to tumours (details in the Supplementary Information). To determine how vascular normalization affects nanomedicine delivery, we studied whether the anti-VEGF-receptor-2 antibody DC101 modulates nanoparticle penetration rates in orthotopic mammary tumours in vivo. We applied a novel physiologically-based mathematical model for drug delivery to tumours to determine how anti-angiogenics affect pore size distributions.

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