Receptor-mediated nose-to-brain delivery of drug combination-loaded polymeric nanocarriers for the treatment of glioblastoma- current progress and future perspectives part II: polymeric nanocarriers for combination therapy and advanced targeting

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ABSTRACT Introduction Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a highly aggressive brain tumor with a bleak prognosis, complicated by factors such as the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the tumor’s heterogeneity, and the systemic toxicity associated with standard therapies. Utilizing receptor-mediated delivery through nasal routes with polymeric nanocarriers provides a noninvasive approach to enhance brain targeting, improve therapeutic outcomes, and increase safety. Area Covered This review focuses on polymeric nanocarriers, including nanoparticles, nanocapsules, dendrimers, and micelles, for use in combination therapy for GBM. It emphasizes targeting overexpressed receptors, advanced carrier designs that enable controlled or responsive release, and multifunctional systems with theranostic capabilities. Additionally, it highlights immunomodulatory and personalized strategies, underscoring their importance for clinical translation. Expert Opinion Polymeric nanocarriers designed for receptor-mediated delivery from the nose to the brain offer a revolutionary approach for combination therapy in GBM, enhancing drug absorption, specificity, and therapeutic effectiveness. Although promising advancements have been made in preclinical studies, their translation to clinical settings is hindered by physiological barriers in the nose, complex formulations, and challenges related to scalability. Moving forward will necessitate refined nanocarrier design, accurate receptor targeting, and thorough clinical testing to confirm these systems as advanced treatment platforms for GBM.

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  • The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics
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The effective treatment of brain tumors is a considerable challenge in part because of the presence of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) that limits drug delivery. Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is an aggressive and infiltrative primary brain tumor with an extremely poor prognosis after standard-of-care therapy with surgery, radiotherapy (RT), and chemotherapy. DNA damage response (DDR) pathways play a critical role in DNA repair in cancer cells, and inhibition of these pathways can potentially augment RT and chemotherapy tumor cell toxicity. The ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) kinase is a key regulator of the DDR network and is potently and selectively inhibited by the ATR inhibitor berzosertib. Although in vitro studies demonstrate a synergistic effect of berzosertib in combination with temozolomide, in vivo efficacy studies have yet to recapitulate this observation using intracranial tumor models. In the current study, we demonstrate that delivery of berzosertib to the brain is restricted by efflux at the BBB. Berzosertib has a high binding affinity to brain tissue compared with plasma, thereby leading to low free drug concentrations in the brain. Berzosertib distribution is heterogenous within the tumor, wherein concentrations are substantially lower in normal brain and invasive tumor rim (wherein the BBB is intact) when compared with those in the tumor core (wherein the BBB is leaky). These results demonstrate that high tissue binding and limited and heterogenous brain distribution of berzosertib may be important factors that influence the efficacy of berzosertib therapy in GBM. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This study examined the brain delivery and efficacy of berzosertib in patient-derived xenograft models of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Berzosertib is actively effluxed at the blood-brain barrier and is highly bound to brain tissue, leading to low free drug concentrations in the brain. Berzosertib is heterogeneously distributed into different regions of the brain and tumor and, in this study, was not efficacious in vivo when combined with temozolomide. These factors inform the future clinical utility of berzosertib for GBM.

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BackgroundManagement of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) has been difficult using standard therapy (radiation with temozolomide chemotherapy). The ketogenic diet is used commonly to treat refractory epilepsy in children and, when administered in restricted amounts, can also target energy metabolism in brain tumors. We report the case of a 65-year-old woman who presented with progressive memory loss, chronic headaches, nausea, and a right hemisphere multi-centric tumor seen with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Following incomplete surgical resection, the patient was diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme expressing hypermethylation of the MGMT gene promoter.MethodsPrior to initiation of the standard therapy, the patient conducted water-only therapeutic fasting and a restricted 4:1 (fat: carbohydrate + protein) ketogenic diet that delivered about 600 kcal/day. The patient also received the restricted ketogenic diet concomitantly during the standard treatment period. The diet was supplemented with vitamins and minerals. Steroid medication (dexamethasone) was removed during the course of the treatment. The patient was followed using MRI and positron emission tomography with fluoro-deoxy-glucose (FDG-PET).ResultsAfter two months treatment, the patient's body weight was reduced by about 20% and no discernable brain tumor tissue was detected using either FDG-PET or MRI imaging. Biomarker changes showed reduced levels of blood glucose and elevated levels of urinary ketones. MRI evidence of tumor recurrence was found 10 weeks after suspension of strict diet therapy.ConclusionThis is the first report of confirmed GBM treated with standard therapy together with a restricted ketogenic diet. As rapid regression of GBM is rare in older patients following incomplete surgical resection and standard therapy alone, the response observed in this case could result in part from the action of the calorie restricted ketogenic diet. Further studies are needed to evaluate the efficacy of restricted ketogenic diets, administered alone or together with standard treatment, as a therapy for GBM and possibly other malignant brain tumors.

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Gynecological health is a global concern, and thus, the formulator researcher strives to improve the quality of life through innovative feminine pharmaceutical formulations. Vaginal delivery appears to be one of the vital strategies for local and systemic action of the therapeutically active agent. The rich vascular network, mucosal permeability, bypass of hepatic first-pass effect, and low enzymatic activity are the exclusive advantages of the vaginal route. But certain hindrances truncate the vaginal route, such as physiological factors including lower pH, self-cleansing mucus with constant secretion, and varying thickness of mucus layer due to menstrual cycle and microbiota. Significance of Review: This present review envisages the advances in the polymeric nanocarriers in the delivery to the vaginal route. Polymeric (mucoadhesive and PEGylated, etc.) nanocarriers have been recently utilized for drug delivery purposes. The modernized analysis of the updated advancements in the polymeric nanocarrier-based vaginal drug delivery system with the budding development is compiled in the present review. The literature search reveals that the novel polymeric nanocarrier design strategies currently being proposed to perk up the delivery of customary drugs through the vaginal route prove effective. Polymeric nanocarrier for vaginal delivery has provided better therapeutic efficacy due to higher drug residence, improved permeation, and sustained release of the active therapeutic agent. The polymeric nanocarriers can deliver different proteins, peptides, nuclear materials, hormones, etc., vaginally that are difficult for administration.

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Lipid-based nanoparticles to address the limitations of GBM therapy by overcoming the blood-brain barrier, targeting glioblastoma stem cells, and counteracting the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment
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Biocompatible nanozyme with dual catalytic activities for high-performance multimodality therapy against glioblastoma
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  • Guihong Lu + 8 more

Nanozymes based on metals have been regarded as a promising candidate in the metabolic reprogramming of low-survival, refractory glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). However, due to size limitations, nanozymes struggle to balance catalytic activity with the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB), limiting their efficiency in GBM therapy. Herein, we establish a hybrid nanocluster, AuMn NCs, by cross-linking ultrasmall nano-gold (Au) and manganese oxide (MnO2), which overcomes the size requirement conflict for integrating catalytic activities, long-period circulation, photothermal effect, glucose consumption, and chemodynamic effect for multimodality treatment against GBM. After administered intravenously, the overall large-size AuMn NCs can escape kidney filtration and cross the BBB for GBM accumulation. Then the individual ultrasmall nano-MnO2components effectively catalyze H2O2degradation as catalase to produce oxygen, which is utilized by individual ultrasmall nano-Au components to consume glucose as glucose oxidase for starvation therapy. The H2O2generated during Au-catalyzed glucose consumption further facilitates MnO2catalytic activity. Such positive feedback overwhelmingly intervenes in the glucose metabolism of GBM. Concurrently, clustered Au-induced photothermal effect and released Mn2+-induced chemodynamic effect further contribute to eliminating GBM cells. The versatile clustered nanozyme offers a feasible strategy for the multimodality intervention of GBM.

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