4.8 Article

Targeted Intraceptor Nanoparticle Therapy Reduces Angiogenesis and Fibrosis in Primate and Murine Macular Degeneration

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 3264-3275

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn305958y

Keywords

nanoparticles; gene delivery; choroidal neovascularization models; anti-VEGF therapy; angiogenesis

Funding

  1. National Institutes for Health [NEI 5R01EY017182-04, ER01EY017950-03, P20 RR024215]
  2. VAMerit Award
  3. Foundation Fighting Blindness
  4. NIH/NCRR Center for Integrative Biomedical Computing [2P41 RR0112553-12]
  5. [EY13870]

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Monthly intraocular injections are widely used to deliver protein-based drugs that cannot cross the blood-retina barrier for the treatment of leading blinding diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD). This invasive treatment carries significant risks, including bleeding, pain, infection, and retinal detachment. Further, current therapies are associated with a rate of retinal fibrosis and geographic atrophy significantly higher than that which occurs in the described natural history of AMD. A novel therapeutic strategy which improves outcomes in a less invasive manner, reduces risk, and provides long-term inhibition of angiogenesis and fibrosis is a felt medical need. Here we show that a single intravenous Injection of targeted, biodegradable nanoparticles delivering a recombinant Flt23k intraceptor plasmid homes to neovascular lesions in the retina and regresses (NV in primate and murine AMD models. Moreover, this treatment suppressed subretinal fibrosis, which is currently not addressed by clinical therapies. Murine vision, as tested by OptoMotry, significantly improved with nearly 40% restoration of visual loss induced by (NV. We found no evidence of ocular or systemic toxicity from nanopartide treatment These findings offer a nanoparticle-based platform for targeted, vitreous-sparing, extended-release, nonviral gene therapy.

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