基于骨支架的骨肉瘤局部给药:现状与未来展望。

IF 6.5 2区 医学 Q1 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY Drug Delivery Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-06 DOI:10.1080/10717544.2024.2391001
Wenqing Liang, Hengguo Long, Hongwei Zhang, Juqin Bai, Bo Jiang, Jiangwei Wang, Lifeng Fu, Wenyi Ming, Jiayi Zhao, Bin Zeng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

骨肉瘤是青少年常见的恶性骨肿瘤。化疗、手术治疗和放射治疗共同构成了骨肉瘤的常规临床治疗方案。虽然骨肉瘤和其他骨肿瘤通常采用手术治疗,但手术切除往往不能完全根除肿瘤,反而成为术后复发和转移的主要原因,最终导致高死亡率。患者术后仍需接受放疗和/或化疗,以阻止肿瘤扩散和转移,而这两种治疗方法都会对人体器官系统产生不良影响。在骨肉瘤的术后治疗中,骨支架可以装载载体(生长因子或药物),起到药物输送系统(DDS)的作用。本综述介绍了目前可用的各种骨支架,并重点介绍了将骨支架作为 DDSs 用于治疗骨肉瘤的主要研究。讨论还包括使用基于支架的 DDSs 的困难和观点。该研究可作为制定高效、安全的骨肉瘤术后治疗计划的依据。
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Bone scaffolds-based localized drugs delivery for osteosarcoma: current status and future perspective.

A common malignant bone neoplasm in teenagers is Osteosarcoma. Chemotherapy, surgical therapy, and radiation therapy together comprise the usual clinical course of treatment for Osteosarcoma. While Osteosarcoma and other bone tumors are typically treated surgically, however, surgical resection frequently fails to completely eradicate tumors, and in turn becomes the primary reason for postoperative recurrence and metastasis, ultimately leading to a high rate of mortality. Patients still require radiation and/or chemotherapy after surgery to stop the spread of the tumor and its metastases, and both treatments have an adverse influence on the body's organ systems. In the postoperative management of osteosarcoma, bone scaffolds can load cargos (growth factors or drugs) and function as drug delivery systems (DDSs). This review describes the different kinds of bone scaffolds that are currently available and highlights key studies that use scaffolds as DDSs for the treatment of osteosarcomas. The discussion also includes difficulties and perspectives regarding the use of scaffold-based DDSs. The study may serve as a source for outlining efficient and secure postoperative osteosarcoma treatment plans.

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来源期刊
Drug Delivery
Drug Delivery 医学-药学
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
5.00%
发文量
250
审稿时长
3.3 months
期刊介绍: Drug Delivery is an open access journal serving the academic and industrial communities with peer reviewed coverage of basic research, development, and application principles of drug delivery and targeting at molecular, cellular, and higher levels. Topics covered include all delivery systems including oral, pulmonary, nasal, parenteral and transdermal, and modes of entry such as controlled release systems; microcapsules, liposomes, vesicles, and macromolecular conjugates; antibody targeting; protein/peptide delivery; DNA, oligonucleotide and siRNA delivery. Papers on drug dosage forms and their optimization will not be considered unless they directly relate to the original drug delivery issues. Published articles present original research and critical reviews.
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