Tunable polymeric micelles for taxane and corticosteroid co-delivery

Armin Azadkhah Shalmani, Alec Wang, Zaheer Ahmed, Maryam Sheybanifard, Rahaf Mihyar, Eva Miriam Buhl, Michael Pohl, Wim E. Hennink, Fabian Kiessling, Josbert M. Metselaar, Yang Shi, Twan Lammers*, Quim Peña*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Nanomedicine holds promise for potentiating drug combination therapies. Increasing (pre)clinical evidence is available exemplifying the value of co-formulating and co-delivering different drugs in modular nanocarriers. Taxanes like paclitaxel (PTX) are widely used anticancer agents, and commonly combined with corticosteroids like dexamethasone (DEX), which besides for suppressing inflammation and infusion reactions, are increasingly explored for modulating the tumor microenvironment towards enhanced nano-chemotherapy delivery and efficacy. We here set out to develop a size- and release rate-tunable polymeric micelle platform for co-delivery of taxanes and corticosteroids. We synthesized amphiphilic mPEG-b-p(HPMAm-Bz) block copolymers of various molecular weights and used them to prepare PTX and DEX single- and double-loaded micelles of different sizes. Both drugs could be efficiently co-encapsulated, and systematic comparison between single- and co-loaded formulations demonstrated comparable physicochemical properties, encapsulation efficiencies, and release profiles. Larger micelles showed slower drug release, and DEX release was always faster than PTX. The versatility of the platform was exemplified by co-encapsulating two additional taxane-corticosteroid combinations, demonstrating that drug hydrophobicity and molecular weight are key properties that strongly contribute to drug retention in micelles. Altogether, our work shows that mPEG-b-p(HPMAm-Bz) polymeric micelles serve as a tunable and versatile nanoparticle platform for controlled co-delivery of taxanes and corticosteroids, thereby paving the way for using these micelles as a modular carrier for multidrug nanomedicine. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

Original languageEnglish
JournalDrug Delivery and Translational Research
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Nov 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).

Funding

Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from the German Federal Ministry of Research and Education (BMBF: Gezielter Wirkstofftransport, PP-TNBC, Project No. 16GW0319K), the German Research Foundation (DFG: LA2937/4-1; SH1223/1-1; SFB1066; GRK/RTG2735 (project number 331065168)), the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan and German Academic Exchange Services (HEC-DAAD Pakistan), and the European Research Council (ERC: ERC-CoG Meta-Targeting (864121); ERC-StG BeaT-IT (101040996)).

FundersFunder number
ERC-CoG Meta-Targeting864121
ERC-StG BeaT-IT101040996
PP-TNBC16GW0319K
European Research Council
Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst
the Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftGRK/RTG2735, LA2937/4-1, SH1223/1-1, 331065168, SFB1066
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung
Higher Education Commision, Pakistan

    Keywords

    • Co-loading
    • Corticosteroid
    • Drug combination
    • Nanomedicine
    • Polymeric micelles
    • Taxane

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