Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte NC 28223 USA
2. Nanoscale Science Program The University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte NC 28223 USA
3. Division of Medical Oncology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute Harvard Medical School Boston MA 02215 USA
Abstract
AbstractCancer immunotherapy recently transforms the traditional approaches against various cancer malignancies. Immunotherapy includes systemic and local treatments to enhance immune responses against cancer and involves strategies such as immune checkpoints, cancer vaccines, immune modulatory agents, mimetic antigen‐presenting cells, and adoptive cell therapy. Despite promising results, these approaches still suffer from several limitations including lack of precise delivery of immune‐modulatory agents to the target cells and off‐target toxicity, among others, that can be overcome using nanotechnology. Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) are investigated to improve various aspects of cancer immunotherapy attributed to the advantageous structural features of this nanomaterial. MSNs can be engineered to alter their properties such as size, shape, porosity, surface functionality, and adjuvanticity. This review explores the immunological properties of MSNs and the use of MSNs as delivery vehicles for immune‐adjuvants, vaccines, and mimetic antigen‐presenting cells (APCs). The review also details the current strategies to remodel the tumor microenvironment to positively reciprocate toward the anti‐tumor immune cells and the use of MSNs for immunotherapy in combination with other anti‐tumor therapies including photodynamic/thermal therapies to enhance the therapeutic effect against cancer. Last, the present demands and future scenarios for the use of MSNs for cancer immunotherapy are discussed.