2017 Annual Meeting
(525h) Design of Dual Encapsulated Biodegradable Nanoparticles for Cancer Treatment
Authors
Nanoparticle drug delivery shows much promise in vitro and in vivo as it provides a foundation that can be easily tailored depending on the characteristics of the disease. Modifications such as size, shape, material composition, drug payload, and targeting moieties affect the cellular internalization and drug release kinetics as well as the therapeutic efficacy. As such, this research aims to show and optimize the factors that most affect particle size, polydispersity, drug encapsulation efficiency, and drug release profile. These factors include solvent/polymer interactions, synthesis method, polymer chemistry, and polymer molecular weight. To study processing parameters, nanoparticles are produced with flash precipitation method using polystyrene as the model polymer and several agents with varying degrees of hydrophobicity (i.e. FITC, Rhodamine B, DiDâ oil) as the model drug. Response measurements include dynamic light scattering (DLS) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) for nanoparticle characterization. Previously the authors used a Box-Behnken experimental design to study the effect of injection flow rate, solvent to anti-solvent ratio, and stir rate on nanoparticle size by controlled precipitation of polystyrene. This allowed the development of a predictive equation. Using this model equation, both 200 and 300 nm particles were synthesized with low batch-to-batch variability in particle size and consistent distribution of particles.
The knowledge gained from these experiments will be utilized for the formulation of biodegradable nanoparticles with dual encapsulation of chemotherapeutic (paclitaxel) and antiangiogenesis agent (fumagillin) [2]. Future work will include evaluating the efficacy of these formulations in cancer treatment.
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