Molecular Engineering of Ultrasmall Silica Nanoparticle-Drug Conjugates as Lung Cancer Therapeutics.

TitleMolecular Engineering of Ultrasmall Silica Nanoparticle-Drug Conjugates as Lung Cancer Therapeutics.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsMadajewski B, Chen F, Yoo B, Turker MZ, Ma K, Zhang L, Chen P-M, Juthani R, Aragon-Sanabria V, Gonen M, Rudin CM, Wiesner U, Bradbury MS, Brennan C
JournalClin Cancer Res
Volume26
Issue20
Pagination5424-5437
Date Published2020 Oct 15
ISSN1557-3265
KeywordsAnimals, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation, Deferoxamine, Drug Delivery Systems, Gefitinib, Humans, Lung Neoplasms, Mice, Nanoparticles, Positron-Emission Tomography, Protein Kinase Inhibitors, Silicon Dioxide, Small Molecule Libraries
Abstract

PURPOSE: Small-molecule inhibitors have had a major impact on cancer care. While treatments have demonstrated clinically promising results, they suffer from dose-limiting toxicities and the emergence of refractory disease. Considerable efforts made to address these issues have more recently focused on strategies implementing particle-based probes that improve drug delivery and accumulation at target sites, while reducing off-target effects.

EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Ultrasmall (<8 nm) core-shell silica nanoparticles, C' dots, were molecularly engineered to function as multivalent drug delivery vehicles for significantly improving key in vivo biological and therapeutic properties of a prototype epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor, gefitinib. Novel surface chemical components were used to conjugate gefitinib-dipeptide drug-linkers and deferoxamine (DFO) chelators for therapeutic delivery and PET imaging labels, respectively.

RESULTS: Gefitinib-bound C' dots (DFO-Gef-C' dots), synthesized using the gefitinib analogue, APdMG, at a range of drug-to-particle ratios (DPR; DPR = 11-56), demonstrated high stability for DPR values≤ 40, bulk renal clearance, and enhanced in vitro cytotoxicity relative to gefitinib (LD50 = 6.21 nmol/L vs. 3 μmol/L, respectively). In human non-small cell lung cancer mice, efficacious Gef-C' dot doses were at least 200-fold lower than that needed for gefitinib (360 nmoles vs. 78 μmoles, respectively), noting fairly equivalent tumor growth inhibition and prolonged survival. Gef-C' dot-treated tumors also exhibited low phosphorylated EFGR levels, with no appreciable wild-type EGFR target inhibition, unlike free drug.

CONCLUSIONS: Results underscore the clinical potential of DFO-Gef-C' dots to effectively manage disease and minimize off-target effects at a fraction of the native drug dose.

DOI10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-0851
Alternate JournalClin Cancer Res
PubMed ID32723835
PubMed Central IDPMC7686858
Grant ListP30 CA008748 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
U54 CA199081 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States