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Authors Wang CL, Cheng XB, Su YQ, Pei Y, Song YZ, Jiao J, Huang ZJ, Ma YF, Dong YM, Yao Y, Fan JJ, Ta H, Liu XR, Xu H, Deng YH
Published Date May 2015 Volume 2015:10 Pages 3533—3545
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S82481
Received 9 February 2015, Accepted 29 March 2015, Published 14 May 2015
Abstract: The
cross-administration of nanocarriers modified by poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG),
named PEGylated nanocarriers, a type of combination therapy, is becoming an
increasingly important method of long-term drug delivery, to decrease side
effects, avoid multidrug resistance, and increase therapeutic efficacy.
However, repeated injections of PEGylated nanocarriers induces the accelerated
blood clearance (ABC) phenomenon, prevents long circulation, and can cause
adverse effects owing to alterations in the biodistribution of the drug.
Although the nature of the ABC phenomenon that is induced by repeated
injections of PEGylated nanocarriers has already been studied in detail, there
are few reports on the immune response elicited by the cross-administration of
PEGylated nanocarriers. In this study, we investigated the ABC phenomenon
induced by the intravenous cross-administration of various PEGylated
nanocarriers, including PEGylated liposomes (PL), PEG micelles (PM), PEGylated
solid lipid nanoparticles (PSLN), and PEGylated emulsions (PE), in beagle dogs.
The results indicated that the magnitude of the immune response elicited by the
cross-administration was in the following order (from the strongest to the
weakest): PL, PE, PSLN, PM. It is specifically PEG in the brush structure that
elicits a significant immune response, in both the induction phase and the
effectuation phase. Furthermore, the present study suggests that there is a
considerable difference between the effect of repeated injections and
cross-administration, depending on the colloidal structure. This work is a
preliminary investigation into the cross-administration of PEGylated
nanocarriers, and our observations can have serious implications for the design
of combination therapies that use PEGylated vectors.
Keywords: ABC phenomenon,
repeated injection, cross-administration, immune response, PEGylated
nanocarriers