Abstract

Breast cancer is the most frequent malignancy in women. This work focuses on developing deformable liposomes as a potential carrier for breast cancer treatment and studying the impact of improving dermal permeation on the efficacy and targeting of liposomes. Raloxifene (RXF), an oestrogen antagonist, was used as a model drug. Using Box–Behnken design, different formulations of RXF-loaded deformable liposome (RLDL) were prepared using different propylene glycol, phospholipid and cholesterol concentrations. The percentage of entrapment efficiency (Y1), particle size (Y2), zeta potential (Y3) and steady-state flux (Y4) of the prepared formulations were all evaluated. Y1 and Y4 were significantly increased and Y2 and Y3 were significantly decreased when the propylene glycol concentration was increased. The optimization was obtained and the optimum formulation was that including phospholipid (1.40% w/w), cholesterol (0.15% w/w) and propylene glycol (10% v/v). The selected optimum formulation displayed a % EE of 78.34 ± 1.04% with a steady-state flux of 4.21 ± 0.02 µg/cm2/h. In order to investigate bioavailability, antitumor effectiveness and permeation, the optimum formulation was selected and included in a carbopol gel. The optimum gel formulation had 2.77 times higher bioavailability and, as a result, considerable antitumor action as compared to oral RXF. In conclusion, optimum RLDL gel may be an effective breast cancer treatment.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is a type of cancer that has uncontrolled breast cell proliferation.In women, breast cancer is the most frequent malignancy that leads to death [1]

  • On the other hand, are a promising approach to improving anticancer topical delivery, but confocal microscopy revealed that they had minimal skin penetration characteristics [8,9]

  • Addition of propylene glycol (PG) to the initial liposome formulation to produce deformable liposomes improves liposome permeability and retention, which is important for anticancer administration [8,10]

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is a type of cancer that has uncontrolled breast cell proliferation. Breast cancer is the most frequent malignancy that leads to death [1]. Late menopause and obesity all increase women’s risk factors for breast cancer [2,3]. Chemotherapeutic drugs have been widely used to treat breast cancer, they are unable to distinguish between cancerous and noncancerous cells, which lead to hazardous side effects [4]. Targeted drug delivery, such as nanoparticles, for the treatment of breast cancer offers a lot of promise, both therapeutically and in pharmacological research.

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