4.6 Review

Harnessing nanomedicine for enhanced immunotherapy for breast cancer brain metastases

Journal

DRUG DELIVERY AND TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 2344-2370

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s13346-021-01039-9

Keywords

Breast cancer brain metastases; Nanoparticles; Nanotechnology; Immunotherapy; Nanoimmunotherapies; Immune checkpoint inhibitors; Blood-brain barrier

Funding

  1. NIH [R37 CA218617, RO1 NS108813]
  2. TEDCO Maryland Innovation Initiative (MII) Commercialization Program: Technology Assessment Phase

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Brain metastases are the most common type of brain tumor, with increasing incidence among breast cancer patients. Due to limited effective treatments, many patients succumb to the disease within a year.
Brain metastases (BMs) are the most common type of brain tumor, and the incidence among breast cancer (BC) patients has been steadily increasing over the past two decades. Indeed, similar to 30% of all patients with metastatic BC will develop BMs, and due to few effective treatments, many will succumb to the disease within a year. Historically, patients with BMs have been largely excluded from clinical trials investigating systemic therapies including immunotherapies (ITs) due to limited brain penetration of systemically administered drugs combined with previous assumptions that BMs are poorly immunogenic. It is now understood that the central nervous system (CNS) is an immunologically distinct site and there is increasing evidence that enhancing immune responses to BCBMs will improve patient outcomes and the efficacy of current treatment regimens. Progress in IT for BCBMs, however, has been slow due to several intrinsic limitations to drug delivery within the brain, substantial safety concerns, and few known targets for BCBM IT. Emerging studies demonstrate that nanomedicine may be a powerful approach to overcome such limitations, and has the potential to greatly improve IT strategies for BMs specifically. This review summarizes the evidence for IT as an effective strategy for BCBM treatment and focuses on the nanotherapeutic strategies currently being explored for BCBMs including targeting the blood-brain/tumor barrier (BBB/BTB), tumor cells, and tumor-supporting immune cells for concentrated drug release within BCBMs, as well as use of nanoparticles (NPs) for delivering immunomodulatory agents, for inducing immunogenic cell death, or for potentiating anti-tumor T cell responses.

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