Carrier-Enhanced Anticancer Efficacy of Sunitinib-Loaded Green Tea-Based Micellar Nanocomplex Beyond Tumor-Targeted Delivery

2019 
Although a few nanomedicines have been approved for clinical use in cancer treatment, that recognizes improved patient safety through targeted delivery, their improved efficacy over conventional drugs has remained marginal. One of the typical drawbacks of nanocarriers for cancer therapy is a low drug-loading capacity that leads to insufficient efficacy and requires an increase in dosage and/or frequency of administration, which in turn increases carrier toxicity. In contrast, elevating drug-loading would cause the risk of nanocarrier instability, resulting in low efficacy and off-target toxicity. This intractable drug-to-carrier ratio has imposed constraints on the design and development of nanocarriers. However, if the nanocarrier has intrinsic therapeutic effects, the efficacy would be synergistically augmented with less concern for the drug-to-carrier ratio. Sunitinib-loaded micellar nanocomplex (SU-MNC) was formed using poly(ethylene glycol)-conjugated epigallocatechin-3-O-gallate (PEG-EGCG) as such a...
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