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Hydroxyethyl starch as an effective methotrexate carrier in anticancer therapy.


ABSTRACT: At present, effective anticancer therapy remains one of the most challenging tasks facing the scientific community. A major limitation to most conventional low-molecular weight anticancer chemotherapeutics is their unfavourable uptake by healthy tissue, fast metabolism and lack of tumour cell selectivity. One way to solve this problem is the application of hybrid nanoparticles containing widely known therapeutic substances. This study was performed with the aim of investigating the potential of use hydroxyethyl starch (HES) as a high-molecular weight carrier for anticancer drug (methotrexate, MTX). HES-MTX conjugates were characterized in terms of MTX content, hydrodynamic size, zeta potential, and drug release kinetics. In vitro biological characteristics were determined using different cancer cell lines. The antitumor effect in vivo was tested in NOD/SCID mice subcutaneously inoculated with MV-4-11 human leukaemia cells and CDF1 mice intraperitoneally inoculated with P388 murine leukaemia cells. The in vivo experiments revealed the considerably higher antitumor efficacy of HES-MTX conjugates in comparison to unconjugated drug. The results presented in this article demonstrate that the application of HES as an anticancer drug carrier can improve the treatment efficacy and have significant implications for the future design and implementation of drug-carrier conjugates. The study should help create new opportunities in the design of HES-based innovative drug-carrier conjugates.

SUBMITTER: Goszczynski TM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4186415 | biostudies-other | 2014 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Hydroxyethyl starch as an effective methotrexate carrier in anticancer therapy.

Goszczyński T M TM   Filip-Psurska B B   Kempińska K K   Wietrzyk J J   Boratyński J J  

Pharmacology research & perspectives 20140506 3


At present, effective anticancer therapy remains one of the most challenging tasks facing the scientific community. A major limitation to most conventional low-molecular weight anticancer chemotherapeutics is their unfavourable uptake by healthy tissue, fast metabolism and lack of tumour cell selectivity. One way to solve this problem is the application of hybrid nanoparticles containing widely known therapeutic substances. This study was performed with the aim of investigating the potential of  ...[more]

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