Problem: A major challenge in drug delivery is ensuring that the drug reaches the target organ at a concentration sufficient to treat the disease. This is particularly problematic for acute illnesses of the vasculature, such as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), ischemic stroke, and myocardial infarction. In these diseases, patients are often too sick to tolerate off-target drug side effects, and systemically delivered drugs rarely accumulate to a significant extent in the organs affected by pathology. Solution: Drs. Jacob Brenner and Vladimir Muzykantov have developed a drug delivery system that can address these challenges. The drug delivery system, “Red Blood Cell (RBC)-Hitchhiking Nanoparticles” (RHNs), utilizes soft nanoparticles, such as liposomes and nanogels, loaded with drugs and the natural properties of RBCs to target the lung endothelium. The nanoparticles are adsorbed onto the surface of the RBC and delivered intravascularly. Once the nanoparticle-RBCs encounter their first capillary bed, the RBCs are physically squeezed, causing the release of the drug-loaded nanoparticles into the capillary endothelium. Since delivery is dependent on the squeezing of RBCs, the nanoparticles do not release their drug cargo until they enter the pulmonary capillaries. This approach minimizes delivery of the drug to sites other than the target organ and ensures that sufficient drug concentration reaches the target site.
Image courtesy of Brenner JS et al. Nat Commun, 9(1):2684 covered by Creative Commons license. Applications:
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Docket # 16-7880