Reprint

Nanotechnology in Cancer Treatment

Edited by
August 2020
224 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03936-374-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03936-375-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Nanotechnology in Cancer Treatment that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Chemistry & Materials Science
Medicine & Pharmacology
Summary

The collection is diverse in the topics covered as well as the contributors, who come from across the globe. The overall topic is inherently a complex one since it integrates the exceptional complexity of cancer biology and treatment with the large and rapidly growing number of potential nanostructures and modifications that could be applied to treatment. In both cancer and nanotechnology, a very small change of a relevant variable can generate exceptional variability in biological outcome, creating inherent challenges to clinical adoption. As with many high-potential fields in medicine, the recognition of exceptional potential for nanotechnology in cancer therapy, with associated expectations of rapid clinical impact, has been followed by disappointingly slow progress that highlights not failure but rather unrealistic expectations for rapid progress. We have passed that period of expected rapid clinical impact for nanoparticle treatment of cancer and are now well-entrenched in the more realistic phase of exploiting the easiest applications, in this case packaging of established chemotherapy drugs, while carefully studying the exceptional numbers of relevant variables that must be evaluated for efficacy and safety of innovative strategies. Although never as rapid as hoped, the progress is clear and clinical impact is growing.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
M-CTX-Fc; liposome; glioblastoma cells; specific targeting; doxorubicin; MMP-2; gold nanoparticles; silver nanoparticles; giant unilamellar vesicles; dark-field microscopy; hyperspectral imaging; DMPC; cholesterol; sarcoma; TRAIL; flavopiridol; immunotherapy; lipid nanoparticles; macrophage targeting; macrophage depletion; nanomedicine; preclinical models; inflammatory diseases; cancer; cargo-free; nanomedicine; combination therapy; cancer therapy; implant; antibody functionalized nanomicelles; epithelial ovarian cancer; chemotherapeutic drugs; nude mouse model; polyelectrolyte complex; curcumin; anticancer therapy; metal nanoparticles; cancer radiotherapy; tumor cell radiosensitization; DNA damage; DNA repair; DNA double strand breaks (DSBs); super-resolution microscopy; single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM); DNA repair foci; damage to lysosomes; half generation polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimer; carboplatin; PEGylation; drug delivery system; cancer treatment; arsenic trioxide (ATO); liposome; targeted drug delivery; cervical cancer; human papilloma virus (HPV); folate conjugation; silica nanoparticles; surface energy modification; NP-based drug delivery