Superstable and Large-Scalable Organosilica-Micellar Hybrid Nanosystem via a Confined Gelation Strategy for Ultrahigh-Dosage Chemotherapy.
Yongsheng LiJianping HeXing QinYu LiuHonglai LiuPing HuYongsheng LiJianlin ShiPublished in: Nano letters (2021)
Although various drug nanocarriers have been developed for treating solid tumors, their clinical transformation is greatly limited by the difficulties in quantity production and unpredictable in vivo toxic effects. Herein, a facile "confined-gelation" strategy is developed to quantity-produce intelligent pluronic organosilica micelles (designated as IPOMs) with an undetectable critical micelle concentration (CMC), which features the self-assembly induced core confinement by block copolymers, the inner hydrolysis-condensation of silane to the oligomer skeleton, and oxidative cross-linking of disulfide skeleton to core gelation. The docetaxel-loaded IPOMs (DTX@IPOMs) with precise glutathione (GSH) responsiveness not only display an ultrahigh tolerated dose (360 mg/kg) in healthy Kunming mice model but also exhibit a remarkable tumor inhibition efficacy in both subcutaneous and orthotopic mice tumor models upon an extraordinarily large dosage (50 mg/kg). The present confined-gelation strategy provides a novel pathway to design and quantity-produce low-toxic and high-efficacy organic-inorganic hybrid nanodrugs in future clinical transformations.