4.6 Article

Influence of vascular normalization on interstitial flow and delivery of liposomes in tumors

Journal

PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 4, Pages 1477-1496

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/60/4/1477

Keywords

interstitial fluid pressure; drug delivery; drug extravasation; convective transport; tumor size

Funding

  1. M Curie Reintegration Grant [268287]
  2. Bogazici University Research funding [BAP 6033, BAP 7126]
  3. TUBITAK Grant [113F047, 112T253]

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Elevated interstitial fluid pressure is one of the barriers of drug delivery in solid tumors. Recent studies have shown that normalization of tumor vasculature by anti-angiogenic factors may improve the delivery of conventional cytotoxic drugs, possibly by increasing blood flow, decreasing interstitial fluid pressure, and enhancing the convective transvascular transport of drug molecules. Delivery of large therapeutic agents such as nanoparticles and liposomes might also benefit from normalization therapy since their transport depends primarily on convection. In this study, a mathematical model is presented to provide supporting evidence that normalization therapy may improve the delivery of 100 nm liposomes into solid tumors, by both increasing the total drug extravasation and providing a more homogeneous drug distribution within the tumor. However these beneficial effects largely depend on tumor size and are stronger for tumors within a certain size range. It is shown that this size effect may persist under different microenvironmental conditions and for tumors with irregular margins or heterogeneous blood supply.

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