Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Dec 2021)

Preclinical toxicological study of long-circulating and fusogenic liposomes co-encapsulating paclitaxel and doxorubicin in synergic ratio

  • Marjorie Coimbra Roque,
  • Caroline Dohanik da Silva,
  • Marthin Raboch Lempek,
  • Geovanni Dantas Cassali,
  • André Luís Branco de Barros,
  • Marília Martins Melo,
  • Mônica Cristina Oliveira

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 144
p. 112307

Abstract

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Combination therapy between paclitaxel (PTX) and doxorubicin (DXR) is applied as the first-line treatment of breast cancer. Co-administration of drugs at synergistic ratio for treatment is facilitated with the use of nanocarriers, such as liposomes. However, despite the high response rate of solid tumors to this combination, a synergism of cardiotoxicity may limit the use. Thus, the objective of this work was to investigate the toxicity of long-circulating and fusogenic liposomes co-encapsulating PTX and DXR at the synergistic molar ratio (1:10) (LCFL-PTX/DXR). For this, clinical chemistry, histopathological analysis and electrocardiographic exams were performed on female Balb/c mice that received a single intravenous dose of LCFL-PTX/DXR. The results of the study indicated that the LD50 dose range (lethal dose for 50% of animals) of the LCFL-PTX/DXR treatment (28.9–34.7 mg/kg) is much higher than that found for free PTX/DXR treatment (20.8–23.1 mg/kg). In addition, liposomes promoted cardiac protection by not raising CK-MB levels in animals, keeping cardiomyocytes without injury or electrocardiographic changes. After 14 days of treatment, free PTX/DXR caused prolongation of the QRS interval when compared to LCFL-PTX/DXR treatment at the same dose (37.0 ± 5.01 ms and 30.83 ± 2.62 ms, respectively, with p = 0.017). The survival rate of animals treated with LCFL-PTX/DXR was three times higher than that of those treated with free drugs. Thus, it was established that the toxicity of LCFL-PTX/DXR is reduced compared to the combination of free PTX/DXR and this platform has advantages for the clinical treatment of breast cancer.

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