Aspirin-Loaded Cross-Linked Lipoic Acid Nanodrug Prevents Postoperative Tumor Recurrence by Residual Cancer Cell Killing and Inflammatory Microenvironment Improvement.
Pei JingYuling LuoYun ChenJiangbing TanChunyan LiaoShi-Yong ZhangPublished in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2023)
In addition to residual cancer cells, the surgery resection-induced hyperinflammatory microenvironment is a key factor that leads to postsurgical cancer recurrence. Herein, we developed a dual-functional nanodrug Asp@cLANVs for postsurgical recurrence inhibition by loading the classical anti-inflammatory drug aspirin (Asp) into cross-linked lipoic acid nanovesicles (cLANVs). The Asp@cLANVs can not only kill residual cancer cells at the doses comparable to common cytotoxic drugs by synergistic interaction between Asp and cLANVs, but also improve the postsurgical inflammatory microenvironment by their strongly synergistic anti-inflammation activity between Asp and cLANVs. Using mice bearing partially removed NCI-H460 tumors, we found that Asp@cLANVs gave a much lower recurrence rate (33.3%) compared with the first-line cytotoxic drug cisplatin (100%), and no mice died for at least 60 days after Asp@cLANV treatment while no mouse survived beyond day 43 in the cisplatin group. This dual-functional nanodrug constructs the first example that combines residual cancer cell killing and postoperative inflammation microenvironment improvement to suppress postsurgical cancer recurrence.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- free survival
- stem cells
- papillary thyroid
- low dose
- patients undergoing
- anti inflammatory
- drug delivery
- squamous cell
- cancer therapy
- drug induced
- diabetic rats
- minimally invasive
- high fat diet induced
- cardiovascular events
- squamous cell carcinoma
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- coronary artery disease
- high glucose
- lymph node metastasis
- mouse model
- insulin resistance
- atrial fibrillation
- wild type