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1.
Nat Rev Urol ; 21(7): 391-405, 2024 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38321289

RESUMEN

Bladder cancer is a histologically and clinically heterogenous disease. Most bladder cancers are urothelial carcinomas, which frequently develop distinct histological subtypes. Several urothelial carcinoma histological subtypes, such as micropapillary, plasmacytoid, small-cell carcinoma and sarcomatoid, show highly aggressive behaviour and pose unique challenges in diagnosis and treatment. Comprehensive genomic characterizations of the urothelial carcinoma subtypes have revealed that they probably arise from a precursor subset of conventional urothelial carcinomas that belong to different molecular subtypes - micropapillary and plasmacytoid subtypes develop along the luminal pathway, whereas small-cell and sarcomatoid subtypes evolve along the basal pathway. The subtypes exhibit distinct genomic alterations, but in most cases their biological properties seem to be primarily determined by specific gene expression profiles, including epithelial-mesenchymal transition, urothelial-to-neural lineage plasticity, and immune infiltration with distinct upregulation of immune regulatory genes. These breakthrough studies have transformed our view of bladder cancer histological subtype biology, generated new hypotheses for therapy and chemoresistance, and facilitated the discovery of new therapeutic targets.


Asunto(s)
Progresión de la Enfermedad , Neoplasias de la Vejiga Urinaria , Neoplasias de la Vejiga Urinaria/genética , Neoplasias de la Vejiga Urinaria/patología , Humanos , Carcinoma de Células Transicionales/genética , Carcinoma de Células Transicionales/patología , Carcinoma de Células Transicionales/clasificación , Invasividad Neoplásica , Transición Epitelial-Mesenquimal/genética
2.
J Control Release ; 2024 Aug 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39103056

RESUMEN

For medical emergencies, such as acute ischemic stroke, rapid drug delivery to the target site is essential. For many small molecule drugs, this goal is unachievable due to poor solubility that prevents intravenous administration, and less obviously, by extensive partitioning to plasma proteins and red blood cells (RBCs), which greatly slows delivery to the target. Here we study these effects and how they can be solved by loading into nanoscale drug carriers. We focus on fingolimod, a small molecule drug that is FDA-approved for treatment of multiple sclerosis, which has also shown promise in the treatment of stroke. Unfortunately, fingolimod has poor solubility and very extensive partitioning to plasma proteins and RBCs (in whole blood, 86% partitions to RBCs, 13.96% to plasma proteins, and 0.04% is free). We develop a liposomal formulation that slows the partitioning of fingolimod to RBCs and plasma proteins, enables intravenous delivery, and additionally prevents fingolimod toxicity to RBCs. The liposomal formulation nearly completely prevented fingolimod adsorption to plasma proteins (association with plasma proteins was 98.4 ±â€¯0.4% for the free drug vs. 5.6 ±â€¯0.4% for liposome-loaded drug). When incubated with whole blood in vitro, the liposomal formulation greatly slowed partitioning of fingolimod to RBCs and also eliminated deleterious effects of fingolimod on RBC rigidity, morphology, and hemolysis. In vivo, the liposomal formulation delayed fingolimod partitioning to RBCs for over 30 min, a critical time window for stroke. Fingolimod-loaded liposomes showed improved efficacy in a mouse model of post-stroke neuroinflammation, completely sealing the leaky blood-brain barrier (114 ±â€¯11.5% reduction in albumin leak into the brain for targeted liposomes vs. 38 ±â€¯16.5% reduction for free drug). This effect was only seen for liposomes modified with antibodies to enable targeted delivery to the site of action, and not in unmodified, long-circulating liposomes. Thus, loading fingolimod into liposomes prevented partitioning to RBCs and associated toxicities and enabled targeted delivery. This paradigm can be used for tuning the blood distribution of small molecule drugs for the treatment of acute illnesses requiring rapid pharmacologic intervention.

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