急性脑损伤与纳米医学:性别是一个生物变量

Amberlyn Simmons, Olivia Mihalek, Heather A. Bimonte Nelson, Rachael W. Sirianni, S. Stabenfeldt
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摘要

数十年来,性别作为一种生物变量一直被认为是药物开发过程中的一个重要方面,因为女性与男性受试者在药物药理和毒性方面的差异会影响新疗法的成败。传统药物系统开发中的这些概念直到最近才开始应用于推进纳米药物系统的开发,这些系统旨在为中枢神经系统(CNS)给药或成像。本综述全面概述了纳米医学和急性脑损伤这两个研究领域的现状,并将性别作为一个生物变量。我们重点介绍了这两个领域中的各个领域,这些领域提供了对性别作为纳米医学、大脑发育、免疫反应以及创伤性脑损伤和中风的病理生理学中的生物变量的基础性理解。我们介绍了当前有关女性与男性生理学的知识,以及越来越多直接涉及性别作为生物变量在这些领域中作用的实证报告。总之,这些数据明确了两个关键观察点。首先,性别影响纳米药物分布、毒性或疗效的方式是重要而复杂的,并取决于所考虑的特定纳米粒子系统;其次,尽管实地知识正在不断积累,使我们能够理解性别作为纳米药物和急性脑损伤领域的一个生物变量,但在知识方面仍存在重大差距,需要加以解决。我们预计,在开发治疗急性中枢神经系统损伤的纳米药物系统时,了解性别这一生物变量将是决定其成功与否的重要因素。
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Acute brain injury and nanomedicine: sex as a biological variable
Sex as a biological variable has been recognized for decades to be a critical aspect of the drug development process, as differences in drug pharmacology and toxicity in female versus male subjects can drive the success or failure of new therapeutics. These concepts in development of traditional drug systems have only recently begun to be applied for advancing nanomedicine systems that are designed for drug delivery or imaging in the central nervous system (CNS). This review provides a comprehensive overview of the current state of two fields of research - nanomedicine and acute brain injury—centering on sex as a biological variable. We highlight areas of each field that provide foundational understanding of sex as a biological variable in nanomedicine, brain development, immune response, and pathophysiology of traumatic brain injury and stroke. We describe current knowledge on female versus male physiology as well as a growing number of empirical reports that directly address sex as a biological variable in these contexts. In sum, the data make clear two key observations. First, the manner in which sex affects nanomedicine distribution, toxicity, or efficacy is important, complex, and depends on the specific nanoparticle system under considerations; second, although field knowledge is accumulating to enable us to understand sex as a biological variable in the fields of nanomedicine and acute brain injury, there are critical gaps in knowledge that will need to be addressed. We anticipate that understanding sex as a biological variable in the development of nanomedicine systems to treat acute CNS injury will be an important determinant of their success.
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