The dose threshold for nanoparticle tumour delivery
纳米颗粒
材料科学
药物输送
纳米技术
医学
作者
Ben Ouyang,Wilson Poon,Yi-Nan Zhang,Zachary P. Lin,Benjamin R. Kingston,Anthony J. Tavares,Yuwei Zhang,Juan Chen,Michael S. Valic,Abdullah M. Syed,Presley MacMillan,Julien Couture‐Senécal,Gang Zheng,Warren C. W. Chan
Nanoparticle delivery to solid tumours over the past ten years has stagnated at a median of 0.7% of the injected dose. Varying nanoparticle designs and strategies have yielded only minor improvements. Here we discovered a dose threshold for improving nanoparticle tumour delivery: 1 trillion nanoparticles in mice. Doses above this threshold overwhelmed Kupffer cell uptake rates, nonlinearly decreased liver clearance, prolonged circulation and increased nanoparticle tumour delivery. This enabled up to 12% tumour delivery efficiency and delivery to 93% of cells in tumours, and also improved the therapeutic efficacy of Caelyx/Doxil. This threshold was robust across different nanoparticle types, tumour models and studies across ten years of the literature. Our results have implications for human translation and highlight a simple, but powerful, principle for designing nanoparticle cancer treatments. Efficient nanoparticle delivery into tumours has been a challenge in the field. It is now shown that the efficiency can be improved substantially when the dose breaches a specific threshold.