The incidence of NODAT in China is similar to that in Western countries. However, the NODAT-related complications are more common and severer in China compared with those in Western countries. The major risk factors are different.
Molecularly targeted agents that are designed to target specific lesions have been proven effective as clinical cancer therapies; however, most currently available therapeutic agents are poorly water-soluble and require oral administration, thereby resulting in low bioavailability and a high risk of side effects due to dose intensification. The rational engineering of systemically injectable medicines that encapsulate such therapeutic payloads may revolutionize anticancer therapies and remains an under-explored area of drug development. Here, the injectable delivery of a nanomedicine complexed with an oral multitargeted kinase inhibitor, vandetanib (vanib), was explored using polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) to achieve the selective accumulation of drug payloads within tumor lesions. To demonstrate this concept, we used biodegradable amphiphilic block copolymer poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(D, L-lactic acid) (PEG-PLA) to nanoprecipitate this potent agent to form water-soluble NPs that are suitable for intravenous administration. NP-vanib induced cytotoxic activity by inhibiting the angiogenetic events mediated by VEGFR and EGFR kinases in tested cancer cells and inhibited the growth, tube formation and metastasis of HUVECs. The intravenously injection of NP-vanib into mice bearing HCC BEL-7402 xenografts more effectively inhibited the tumor than the oral administration of vanib. In addition, due to the modular design of these NPs, the drug-loaded particles can easily be decorated with iRGD, a tumor-homing and -penetrating peptide motif, which further improved the in vivo performance of these vanib-loaded NPs. Our results demonstrate that reformulating targeted therapeutic agents in NPs permits their systemic administration and thus significantly improves the potency of currently available, orally delivered agents.
Background and purpose: Recently, evidence that Zinc transporter ZRT/IRT-like protein 4 (ZIP4) is involved in invasiveness and apoptosis has emerged in pancreatic cancer and prostate cancer. Our aim was to assess the role of ZIP4 in invasiveness, migration and apoptosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The prognostic value of ZIP4 in HCC after liver transplantation was evaluated.Methods: The role of ZIP4 in HCC was investigated by overexpressing ZIP4 in BEL7402 and HepG2 cells and inhibiting ZIP4 in HuH-7 and HepG2 cells, using overexpression and shRNA plasmids in vitro studies. Immunohistochemical analysis was used to evaluate ZIP4 expression in HCC tissues from 60 patients undergoing liver transplantation, 36 cirrhotic tissue samples, and 6 normal tissue samples. Prognostic significance was assessed using the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test.Results: Specific suppression of ZIP4 reduced cell migration and invasiveness, whereas ZIP4 overexpression caused increases in cell migration and invasiveness. Furthermore, overexpression of ZIP4 resulted in increased expression of pro-metastatic genes (MMP-2, MMP-9) and decreased expression of pro-apoptotic genes (caspase-3, caspase-9, Bax). In contrast, suppression of ZIP4 resulted in an opposite effect. ZIP4 was more highly expressed in tumor tissues than non-tumor tissues (P < 0.0001). ZIP4 expression was significantly associated with tumor recurrence (P = 0.002), tumor node metastasis stage (P = 0.044), Child-Turcotte-Pugh score (P = 0.042), and tumor size (P = 0.022). Univariate analysis showed that ZIP4 expression was significantly associated with overall survival (P = 0.020) and tumor-free survival (P = 0.049). Multivariate analysis revealed that ZIP4 was an independent predictor of overall survival (P = 0.037) after liver transplantation.Conclusions: ZIP4 could promote migration, invasiveness, and suppress apoptosis in hepatocellular carcinoma, and represent a novel predictor of poor prognosis and therapeutic target for patients with HCC who undergo liver transplantation.
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