Uveal melanoma (UM) is the most common malignant intraocular tumor with the trait of distant metastases. Currently, the standard clinical therapy results in suboptimal outcomes due to ineffective inhibition of tumor metastasis. Thus, developing novel therapeutic modalities for UM remains a critical priority. Herein, we have developed an injectable nanocomposite hydrogel (HA-DOX/LAP gel) through integrating hyaluronic acid-based drug-loaded nanoparticles into an alginate-dopamine gel, delivering the chemotherapeutic drugs, lapatinib and doxorubicin for combinational treatment of UM. HA-DOX/LAP gel is fabricated in situ by a simple injection of the mixed precursor solution into tumor sites and maintains in vivo for more than 21 days. The entrapped drug-loaded nanoparticles can gradually release from HA-DOX/LAP gel, enhancing tumor targeting and penetration, and synchronously releasing lapatinib and doxorubicin into the acidic intracellular environment to synergistically destroy UM cells. In vivo anti-tumor studies conducted in MuM-2B tumor models demonstrated that HA-DOX/LAP gel significantly impedes tumor growth, diminishes postoperative recurrence, and prolongs overall survivals of UM tumor-bearing mice through only single injection. Remarkably, the escaped drug-loaded nanoparticles effectively reduce the risk of tumor metastases. Our findings provide new insights for the development of multifunctional nanocomposite-incorporating combination therapy against UM by targeting tumor recurrence and metastases.
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