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Review

Antibody-targeted liposomes in cancer therapy and imaging

, PhD & , PhD
Pages 189-204 | Published online: 05 Feb 2008
 

Abstract

Background: Targeted liposomes can be broadly defined as liposomes that are engineered to interact with a particular population of cells with the objective of delivering a payload or increasing their retention within the targeted cell population by means of a chemical interaction with cell-surface molecules or other tissue-specific ligands. Objective: The authors review recent advances in the field with an emphasis on pre-clinical studies and place them in the context of historical developments. Methods: The review focuses on immunoliposomes (antibody-mediated targeting) as these constructs are presently the most prevalent. Conclusion: The field has advanced in tandem with advances in liposome design and antibody and protein engineering. Targeted liposomes have been used in diagnosis to deliver magnetic resonance contrast agents and radionuclides for magnetic resonance and nuclear medicine imaging, respectively. They have been used in gene therapy to deliver a variety of gene expression modifiers, including plasmids, anti-sense oligonucleotides and short interfering RNA. Targeted liposomes provide a delivery advantage over untargeted liposomes not because of increased localization to tumor sites but because of increased interaction with the target cell population once localized to the tumor site. The increased interaction can take on the form of fusion with the cellular membrane or internalization by endocytosis. To the extent that the spatial distribution of targeted liposomes within a solid tumor may become more non-uniform than has been found for untargeted liposomes, this may be a drawback. However, systematic comparisons of the spatial distribution in tumors of targeted versus untargeted liposomes have yet to be performed. The majority of reported studies have been in the area of chemotherapy delivery. Their use in radionuclide and chemo- and radiosensitizer delivery is just emerging. Multifunctional liposomes containing ‘layered functionalities’ could potentially be the future direction in targeted liposome-based therapy.

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