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Size optimization of carfilzomib nanocrystals for systemic delivery to solid tumors

Research Authors
Hytham H. Gadalla a,b , Seongsoo Lee c , Hyungjun Kim a,d , Abigail T. Armstrong a , Dina Fathalla b , Fawzia Habib b , Hyunyoung Jeong a,e , Wooin Lee c,**, Yoon Yeo a,f,*
Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Journal of Controlled Release
Research Publisher
Elsevier
Research Vol
352
Research Website
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2022.10.041
Research Year
2022
Research Abstract

Carfilzomib (CFZ) is a second-generation proteasome inhibitor effective in blood cancer therapy. However, CFZ has shown limited efficacy in solid tumor therapy due to the short half-life and poor tumor distribution. Albumincoated nanocrystal (NC) formulation was shown to improve the circulation stability of CFZ, but its antitumor efficacy remained suboptimal. We hypothesize that NC size reduction is critical to the formulation safety and efficacy as the small size would decrease the distribution in the reticuloendothelial system (RES) and selectively increase the uptake by tumor cells. We controlled the size of CFZ-NCs by varying the production parameters in the crystallization-in-medium method and compared the size-reduced CFZ-NCs (z-average of 168 nm, NC168) with a larger counterpart (z-average of 325 nm, NC325) as well as the commercial CFZ formulation (CFZ-CD). Both CFZ-NCs showed similar or higher cytotoxicity than CFZ-CD against breast cancer cells. NC168 showed greater uptake by cancer cells, less uptake by macrophages and lower immune cell toxicity than NC325 or CFZCD. NC168, but not NC325, showed a similar safety profile to CFZ-CD in vivo. The biodistribution and antitumor efficacy of CFZ-NCs in mice were also size-dependent. NC168 showed greater antitumor efficacy and tumor accumulation but lower RES accumulation than NC325 in 4T1 breast cancer model. These results support that NC formulation with an optimal particle size can improve the therapeutic efficacy of CFZ in solid tumors.