International Journal of Nanomedicine (Sep 2024)

What is the Reason That the Pharmacological Future of Chemotherapeutics in the Treatment of Lung Cancer Could Be Most Closely Related to Nanostructures? Platinum Drugs in Therapy of Non-Small and Small Cell Lung Cancer and Their Unexpected, Possible Interactions. The Review

  • Szupryczyński K,
  • Czeleń P,
  • Jeliński T,
  • Szefler B

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 19
pp. 9503 – 9547

Abstract

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Kamil Szupryczyński,1 Przemysław Czeleń,2 Tomasz Jeliński,2 Beata Szefler2 1Doctoral School of Medical and Health Sciences, Faculty of Pharmacy, Collegium Medicum, Nicolaus, Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, Poland; 2Department of Physical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Collegium Medicum, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, PolandCorrespondence: Beata Szefler, Email [email protected]: Over the course of several decades, anticancer treatment with chemotherapy drugs for lung cancer has not changed significantly. Unfortunately, this treatment prolongs the patient’s life only by a few months, causing many side effects in the human body. It has also been proven that drugs such as Cisplatin, Carboplatin, Oxaliplatin and others can react with other substances containing an aromatic ring in which the nitrogen atom has a free electron group in its structure. Thus, such structures may have a competitive effect on the nucleobases of DNA. Therefore, scientists are looking not only for new drugs, but also for new alternative ways of delivering the drug to the cancer site. Nanotechnology seems to be a great hope in this matter. Creating a new nanomedicine would reduce the dose of the drug to an absolute minimum, and thus limit the toxic effect of the drug; it would allow for the exclusion of interactions with competitive compounds with a structure similar to nucleobases; it would also permit using the so-called targeted treatment and bypassing healthy cells; it would allow for the introduction of other treatment options, such as radiotherapy directly to the cancer site; and it would provide diagnostic possibilities. This article is a review that aims to systematize the knowledge regarding the anticancer treatment of lung cancer, but not only. It shows the clear possibility of interactions of chemotherapeutics with compounds competitive to the nitrogenous bases of DNA. It also shows the possibilities of using nanostructures as potential Platinum drug carriers, and proves that nanomedicine can easily become a new medicinal product in personalized medicine.Keywords: fullerenes, nanotube, nanoparticles, drug delivery, personalized medicine, platinum-based drugs, cisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatin, nedaplatin

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