4.7 Review

Nanomaterials for cancer therapy: current progress and perspectives

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY & ONCOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13045-021-01096-0

Keywords

Nanomaterial; Cancer therapy; Tumor microenvironment; Exosome; Blood-brain barrier; Drug delivery; Protein corona

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81974074, 81570537]
  2. Outstanding Youth Project of Hunan Education Department [19B475]

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Nanomaterials play an important role in cancer therapy by targeting cancer cells, tumor microenvironment, and the immune system. However, despite an increasing number of studies, the approval of nano-drugs has not significantly increased, requiring further research to improve clinical translation efficiency.
Cancer is a disease with complex pathological process. Current chemotherapy faces problems such as lack of specificity, cytotoxicity, induction of multi-drug resistance and stem-like cells growth. Nanomaterials are materials in the nanorange 1-100 nm which possess unique optical, magnetic, and electrical properties. Nanomaterials used in cancer therapy can be classified into several main categories. Targeting cancer cells, tumor microenvironment, and immune system, these nanomaterials have been modified for a wide range of cancer therapies to overcome toxicity and lack of specificity, enhance drug capacity as well as bioavailability. Although the number of studies has been increasing, the number of approved nano-drugs has not increased much over the years. To better improve clinical translation, further research is needed for targeted drug delivery by nano-carriers to reduce toxicity, enhance permeability and retention effects, and minimize the shielding effect of protein corona. This review summarizes novel nanomaterials fabricated in research and clinical use, discusses current limitations and obstacles that hinder the translation from research to clinical use, and provides suggestions for more efficient adoption of nanomaterials in cancer therapy.

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