Improved targeting of cancers with nanotherapeutics

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Abstract

Targeted cancer nanotherapeutics offers numerous opportunities for the selective uptake of toxic chemotherapies within tumors and cancer cells. The unique properties of nanoparticles, such as their small size, large surface-to-volume ratios, and the ability to achieve multivalency of targeting ligands on their surface, provide superior advantages for nanoparticle-based drug delivery to a variety of cancers. This review highlights various key concepts in the design of targeted nanotherapeutics for cancer therapy, and discusses physicochemical parameters affecting nanoparticle targeting, along with recent developments for cancer-targeted nanomedicines.

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Foster, C., Watson, A., Kaplinsky, J., & Kamaly, N. (2017). Improved targeting of cancers with nanotherapeutics. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1530, pp. 13–37). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-6646-2_2

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