Login / Signup

Method of establishing breast cancer brain metastases affects brain uptake and efficacy of targeted, therapeutic nanoparticles.

Emily A WyattMark E Davis
Published in: Bioengineering & translational medicine (2018)
HER2-targeted therapies effectively control systemic disease, but their efficacy against brain metastases is hindered by their low penetration of the blood-brain and blood-tumor barriers (BBB and BTB). We investigate brain uptake and antitumor efficacy of transferrin receptor (TfR)-targeted, therapeutic nanoparticles designed to transcytose the BBB/BTB in three murine models. Two known models involving intracranial (IC) or intracardiac (ICD) injection of human breast cancer cells were employed, as was a third model developed here involving intravenous (IV) injection of the cells to form whole-body tumors that eventually metastasize to the brain. We show the method of establishing brain metastases significantly affects therapeutic BBB/BTB penetration. Free drug accumulates and delays growth in IC- and ICD-formed brain tumors, while non-targeted nanoparticles show uptake and inhibition only in IC-established metastases. TfR-targeted nanoparticles accumulate and significantly delay growth in all three models, suggesting the IV model maintains a more intact BBB/BTB than the other models.
Keyphrases