Abstract

Drug delivery systems (DDS) based on functionalized polymeric nanoparticles have attracted considerable attention. Although great advances have been reported in the past decades, the fabrication efficiency and reproducibility of polymeric nanoparticles are barely satisfactory due to the intrinsic limitations of the traditional self-assembly method, which severely prevent further applications of the intelligent DDS. In the last decade, a new self-assembly method, which is usually called polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA), has become a powerful strategy for the fabrication of the polymeric nanoparticles with bespoke morphology. The PISA strategy efficiently simplifies the fabrication of polymeric nanoparticles (combination of the polymerization and self-assembly in one pot) and allows the fabrication of polymeric nanoparticles at a relatively high concentration (up to 50 wt%), making it realistic for large-scale production of polymeric nanoparticles. In this review, the developments of PISA-based polymeric nanoparticles for drug delivery are discussed.

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