4.7 Article

In vivo biodistribution of erythrocytes and polyethyleneglycol-phosphatidylethanolamine micelles carrying the antitumour agent dequalinium

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DOI: 10.1016/S0939-6411(03)00089-4

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drug delivery system; drug carriers; micelles; red blood cells; dequalinium; antitumour agent

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Dequalinium (DQA), a lipophilic drug with anti-cancer activity has been incorporated into mouse red blood cells (DQA-RBCs) and polyethylene glycol phosphatidylethanolamine micelles (DQA-PEG-PE-micelles) in order to overcome the drug's solubility problems and to make it suitable for in vivo applications. The incorporation of DQA into erythrocytes, the release of DQA from RBCs in the presence of autologous plasma and the biodistribution of Cr-51-DQA-RBCs and In-111-DQA-PEG-PE micelles in mice has been studied. Under optimal conditions, up to 84.9% of 0.2 mM dequalinium can be incorporated into erythrocytes. The incubation of DQA-RBC with serum leads to the release of DQA over a period of 24 h. Since Cr-51-DQA-RBCs were found to have a long circulation half-life (5-6 days), the use of RBCs as a sustained release system for DQA can be suggested. In contrast to DQA containing erythrocytes, however, DQA loaded In-111-PEG-PE micelles displayed a shorter half-life (4 h) due to their quick uptake by the liver. The further exploration of PEG-PE micelles as a fast acting release system for DQA appears warranted. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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