Lipid-DNA Nanoparticles as Drug-Delivery Vehicles for the Treatment of Retinal Diseases

Standard

Lipid-DNA Nanoparticles as Drug-Delivery Vehicles for the Treatment of Retinal Diseases. / Schnichels, Sven; Simmang, David; Löscher, Marina; Herrmann, Andreas; de Vries, Jan Willem; Spitzer, Martin S; Hurst, José.

In: PHARMACEUTICS, Vol. 15, No. 2, 04.02.2023, p. 532.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Schnichels, S, Simmang, D, Löscher, M, Herrmann, A, de Vries, JW, Spitzer, MS & Hurst, J 2023, 'Lipid-DNA Nanoparticles as Drug-Delivery Vehicles for the Treatment of Retinal Diseases', PHARMACEUTICS, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 532. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15020532

APA

Schnichels, S., Simmang, D., Löscher, M., Herrmann, A., de Vries, J. W., Spitzer, M. S., & Hurst, J. (2023). Lipid-DNA Nanoparticles as Drug-Delivery Vehicles for the Treatment of Retinal Diseases. PHARMACEUTICS, 15(2), 532. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15020532

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{f62d94b4ffdd45aba1532d4553622242,
title = "Lipid-DNA Nanoparticles as Drug-Delivery Vehicles for the Treatment of Retinal Diseases",
abstract = "Retinal eye diseases are the leading cause of blindness in the Western world. Up to date, the only efficient treatment for many retinal diseases consists of invasive intravitreal injections of highly concentrated drugs. Despite the fact that these injections are unpleasant for the patients, they potentially cause serious side effects, e.g., infections, bleeding within the eye or retinal detachment, especially when performed on a monthly basis, thus decreasing the injection frequency and lowering the desired drug dose. Therefore, a sustained released at the region of interest with a sustained release is desired. Recently, novel lipid-DNA nanoparticles (NPs) were shown to be an efficient drug delivery platform to the anterior segment of the eye. In this study, we investigated the distribution and tropism of the NPs when applied intravitreally, as a potential medication carrier to the posterior part of the eye. This technology is perfectly suited for the delivery of low molecular weight drugs to the back of the eye, which so far is greatly hindered by fast diffusion rates of the free drugs in the vitreous body and their intrinsically low retainability in ocular tissue. Excellent biodistribution, adherence and presence for up to five days was found for the different tested nanoparticles ex vivo and in vivo. In conclusion, our lipid-DNA based nanocarrier system was able to reach the retina within minutes and penetrate the retina providing potentially safe and long-term carrier systems for small molecules or nucleotide-based therapies.",
author = "Sven Schnichels and David Simmang and Marina L{\"o}scher and Andreas Herrmann and {de Vries}, {Jan Willem} and Spitzer, {Martin S} and Jos{\'e} Hurst",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "4",
doi = "10.3390/pharmaceutics15020532",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "532",
journal = "PHARMACEUTICS",
issn = "1999-4923",
publisher = "MDPI Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lipid-DNA Nanoparticles as Drug-Delivery Vehicles for the Treatment of Retinal Diseases

AU - Schnichels, Sven

AU - Simmang, David

AU - Löscher, Marina

AU - Herrmann, Andreas

AU - de Vries, Jan Willem

AU - Spitzer, Martin S

AU - Hurst, José

PY - 2023/2/4

Y1 - 2023/2/4

N2 - Retinal eye diseases are the leading cause of blindness in the Western world. Up to date, the only efficient treatment for many retinal diseases consists of invasive intravitreal injections of highly concentrated drugs. Despite the fact that these injections are unpleasant for the patients, they potentially cause serious side effects, e.g., infections, bleeding within the eye or retinal detachment, especially when performed on a monthly basis, thus decreasing the injection frequency and lowering the desired drug dose. Therefore, a sustained released at the region of interest with a sustained release is desired. Recently, novel lipid-DNA nanoparticles (NPs) were shown to be an efficient drug delivery platform to the anterior segment of the eye. In this study, we investigated the distribution and tropism of the NPs when applied intravitreally, as a potential medication carrier to the posterior part of the eye. This technology is perfectly suited for the delivery of low molecular weight drugs to the back of the eye, which so far is greatly hindered by fast diffusion rates of the free drugs in the vitreous body and their intrinsically low retainability in ocular tissue. Excellent biodistribution, adherence and presence for up to five days was found for the different tested nanoparticles ex vivo and in vivo. In conclusion, our lipid-DNA based nanocarrier system was able to reach the retina within minutes and penetrate the retina providing potentially safe and long-term carrier systems for small molecules or nucleotide-based therapies.

AB - Retinal eye diseases are the leading cause of blindness in the Western world. Up to date, the only efficient treatment for many retinal diseases consists of invasive intravitreal injections of highly concentrated drugs. Despite the fact that these injections are unpleasant for the patients, they potentially cause serious side effects, e.g., infections, bleeding within the eye or retinal detachment, especially when performed on a monthly basis, thus decreasing the injection frequency and lowering the desired drug dose. Therefore, a sustained released at the region of interest with a sustained release is desired. Recently, novel lipid-DNA nanoparticles (NPs) were shown to be an efficient drug delivery platform to the anterior segment of the eye. In this study, we investigated the distribution and tropism of the NPs when applied intravitreally, as a potential medication carrier to the posterior part of the eye. This technology is perfectly suited for the delivery of low molecular weight drugs to the back of the eye, which so far is greatly hindered by fast diffusion rates of the free drugs in the vitreous body and their intrinsically low retainability in ocular tissue. Excellent biodistribution, adherence and presence for up to five days was found for the different tested nanoparticles ex vivo and in vivo. In conclusion, our lipid-DNA based nanocarrier system was able to reach the retina within minutes and penetrate the retina providing potentially safe and long-term carrier systems for small molecules or nucleotide-based therapies.

U2 - 10.3390/pharmaceutics15020532

DO - 10.3390/pharmaceutics15020532

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 36839853

VL - 15

SP - 532

JO - PHARMACEUTICS

JF - PHARMACEUTICS

SN - 1999-4923

IS - 2

ER -