Exploring and Analyzing the Systemic Delivery Barriers for Nanoparticles

Author:

Wang Lin1,Quine Skyler1,Frickenstein Alex N.1,Lee Michael1,Yang Wen1,Sheth Vinit M.1,Bourlon Margaret D.2,He Yuxin1,Lyu Shanxin1,Garcia‐Contreras Lucila2,Zhao Yan D.34,Wilhelm Stefan145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Stephenson School of Biomedical Engineering University of Oklahoma Norman OK 73019 USA

2. College of Pharmacy University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Oklahoma City OK 73117 USA

3. Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Oklahoma City OK 73012 USA

4. Stephenson Cancer Center Oklahoma City OK 73104 USA

5. Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Science, and Technology (IBEST) Norman OK 73019 USA

Abstract

AbstractMost nanomedicines require efficient in vivo delivery to elicit meaningful diagnostic and therapeutic effects. However, en route to their intended tissues, systemically administered nanoparticles often encounter delivery barriers. To describe these barriers, the term “nanoparticle blood removal pathways” (NBRP) is proposed, which summarizes the interactions between nanoparticles and the body's various cell‐dependent and cell‐independent blood clearance mechanisms. Nanoparticle design and biological modulation strategies are reviewed to mitigate nanoparticle‐NBRP interactions. As these interactions affect nanoparticle delivery, the preclinical literature from 2011–2021 is studied, and the nanoparticle blood circulation and organ biodistribution data are analyzed. The findings reveal that nanoparticle surface chemistry affects the in vivo behavior more than other nanoparticle design parameters. Combinatory biological‐PEG surface modification improves the blood area under the curve by ≈418%, with a decrease in liver accumulation of up to 47%. A greater understanding of nanoparticle‐NBRP interactions and associated delivery trends will provide new nanoparticle design and biological modulation strategies for safer, more effective, and more efficient nanomedicines.

Funder

University of Oklahoma

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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