4.8 Article

Tissue-reactive drugs enable materials-free local depots

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE
Volume 343, Issue -, Pages 142-151

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2022.01.023

Keywords

Sustained release; Materials-free delivery; Paclitaxel; Pancreatic cancer; Extracellular matrix; N-hydroxysuccinimide ester

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [R21-CA246414, R37-CA260223]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) [UL1TR002489]
  3. UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center's University Cancer Research Fund
  4. Faculty Research and Professional Development Grant from North Carolina State University
  5. University of North Carolina
  6. North Carolina State University
  7. Microscopy Services Laboratory, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine [P30 CA016086]
  8. North Carolina Biotech Center Institutional Support [2016IDG-1016]
  9. NCI Center Core Support Grant [5P30CA016080-42]

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The method of creating materials-free intratumoral drug depots through Tissue-Reactive Anchoring Pharmaceuticals (TRAPs) has the potential to achieve sustained drug delivery in desmoplastic tumor tissues, providing a promising approach for the treatment of localized diseases.
Local, sustained drug delivery of potent therapeutics holds promise for the treatment of a myriad of localized diseases while eliminating systemic side effects. However, introduction of drug delivery depots such as viscous hydrogels or polymer-based implants is highly limited in stiff tissues such as desmoplastic tumors. Here, we present a method to create materials-free intratumoral drug depots through Tissue-Reactive Anchoring Pharmaceuticals (TRAPs). TRAPs diffuse into tissue and attach locally for sustained drug release. In TRAPs, potent drugs are modified with ECM-reactive groups and then locally injected to quickly react with accessible amines within the ECM, creating local drug depots. We demonstrate that locally injected TRAPs create dispersed, stable intratumoral depots deep within mouse and human pancreatic tumor tissues. TRAPs depots based on ECMreactive paclitaxel (TRAP paclitaxel) had better solubility than free paclitaxel and enabled sustained in vitro and in vivo drug release. TRAP paclitaxel induced higher tumoral apoptosis and sustained better antitumor efficacy than the free drug. By providing continuous drug access to tumor cells, this material-free approach to sustained drug delivery of potent therapeutics has the potential in a wide variety of diseases where current injectable depots fall short.

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