posted on 2024-10-09, 07:30authored byYi Ju, Shiyao Li, Abigail Er Qi Tan, Emily H. Pilkington, Paul T. Brannon, Magdalena Plebanski, Jiwei Cui, Frank Caruso, Kristofer J. Thurecht, Constantine Tam, Stephen J. Kent
Antibody-directed targeting of chemotherapeutic nanoparticles
to
primary human cancers holds promise for improving efficacy and reducing
off-target toxicity. However, clinical responses to targeted nanomedicines
are highly variable. Herein, we prepared and examined a matrix of
9 particles (organic and inorganic particles of three surface chemistries
with and without antibody functionalization) and developed an ex vivo model to study the person-specific targeting of
nanoparticles in whole blood of 15 patients with chronic lymphocytic
leukemia (CLL). Generally, anti-CD20-functionalized poly(ethylene
glycol) (PEG) nanoparticles efficiently targeted CLL cells, leading
to low off-target phagocytosis by granulocytes and monocytes in the
blood. However, there was up to 164-fold patient-to-patient variability
in the CLL targeting. This was further exemplified through using clinically
relevant PEGylated doxorubicin-encapsulated liposomes, which showed
high interpersonal differences in CLL targeting (up to 234-fold differences)
and off-target phagocytosis (up to 65- and 112-fold differences in
granulocytes and monocytes, respectively). Off-target phagocytosis
led to almost all monocytes being killed within 24 h of treatment.
Variance of the off-target association of PEGylated liposomes with
granulocytes and monocytes significantly correlated to anti-PEG immunoglobulin
G levels in the blood of CLL patients. A negative correlation between
CLL targeting of PEG particles and anti-PEG immunoglobulin M levels
was found in the blood. Taken together, our study identifies anti-PEG
antibodies as key proteins in modulating patient-specific targeting
of PEGylated nanoparticles in human leukemia blood. Other factors,
such as the antigen expression of targeted cells and fouling properties
of nanoparticles, also play an important role in patient-specific
targeting. The human leukemia blood assay we developed provides an ex vivo model to evaluate interpersonal variances in response
to targeted nanomedicines.