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Dive into the research topics where Elvin Blanco is active.

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Featured researches published by Elvin Blanco.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

Principles of nanoparticle design for overcoming biological barriers to drug delivery

Elvin Blanco; Haifa Shen; Mauro Ferrari

Biological barriers to drug transport prevent successful accumulation of nanotherapeutics specifically at diseased sites, limiting efficacious responses in disease processes ranging from cancer to inflammation. Although substantial research efforts have aimed to incorporate multiple functionalities and moieties within the overall nanoparticle design, many of these strategies fail to adequately address these barriers. Obstacles, such as nonspecific distribution and inadequate accumulation of therapeutics, remain formidable challenges to drug developers. A reimagining of conventional nanoparticles is needed to successfully negotiate these impediments to drug delivery. Site-specific delivery of therapeutics will remain a distant reality unless nanocarrier design takes into account the majority, if not all, of the biological barriers that a particle encounters upon intravenous administration. By successively addressing each of these barriers, innovative design features can be rationally incorporated that will create a new generation of nanotherapeutics, realizing a paradigmatic shift in nanoparticle-based drug delivery.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2009

Multifunctional micellar nanomedicine for cancer therapy.

Elvin Blanco; Chase W. Kessinger; Baran D. Sumer; Jinming Gao

Polymeric micelles are supramolecular, core-shell nanoparticles that offer considerable advantages for cancer diagnosis and therapy. Their relatively small size (10–100 nm), ability to solubilize hydrophobic drugs as well as imaging agents, and improved pharmacokinetics provide a useful bioengineering platform for cancer applications. Several polymeric micelle formulations are currently undergoing phase I/II clinical trials, which have shown improved antitumor efficacy and reduced systemic toxicity. This minireview will focus on recent advancements in the multifunctional design of micellar nanomedicine with tumor targeting, stimulated drug release, and cancer imaging capabilities. Such functionalization strategies result in enhanced micellar accumulation at tumor sites, higher drug bioavailability, as well as improved tumor diagnosis and visualization of therapy. Ultimately, integrated nanotherapeutic systems (e.g., theranostic nanomedicine) may prove essential to address the challenges of tumor heterogeneity and adaptive resistance to achieve efficacious treatment of cancer.


Cancer Science | 2011

Nanomedicine in cancer therapy: Innovative trends and prospects

Elvin Blanco; Angela Hsiao; Aman P. Mann; Matthew G. Landry; Funda Meric-Bernstam; Mauro Ferrari

Cancer is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, with recent advancements resulting in modest impacts on patient survival. Nanomedicine represents an innovative field with immense potential for improving cancer treatment, having ushered in several established drug delivery platforms. Nanoconstructs such as liposomes are widely used in clinics, while polymer micelles are in advanced phases of clinical trials in several countries. Currently, the field of nanomedicine is generating a new wave of nanoscale drug delivery strategies, embracing trends that involve the functionalization of these constructs with moieties that enhance site‐specific delivery and tailored release. Herein, we discuss several advancements in established nanoparticle technologies such as liposomes, polymer micelles, and dendrimers regarding tumor targeting and controlled release strategies, which are being incorporated into their design with the hope of generating a more robust and efficacious nanotherapeutic modality. We also highlight a novel strategy known as multistage drug delivery; a rationally designed nanocarrier aimed at overcoming numerous biological barriers involved in drug delivery through the decoupling of various tasks that comprise the journey from the moment of systemic administration to arrival at the tumor site. (Cancer Sci 2011; 102: 1247–1252)


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Multi-stage delivery nano-particle systems for therapeutic applications

Rita E. Serda; Biana Godin; Elvin Blanco; Ciro Chiappini; Mauro Ferrari

BACKGROUND The daunting task for drug molecules to reach pathological lesions has fueled rapid advances in Nanomedicine. The progressive evolution of nanovectors has led to the development of multi-stage delivery systems aimed at overcoming the numerous obstacles encountered by nanovectors on their journey to the target site. SCOPE OF REVIEW This review summarizes major findings with respect to silicon-based drug delivery vectors for cancer therapeutics and imaging. Based on rational design, well-established silicon technologies have been adapted for the fabrication of nanovectors with specific shapes, sizes, and porosities. These vectors are part of a multi-stage delivery system that contains multiple nano-components, each designed to achieve a specific task with the common goal of site-directed delivery of therapeutics. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS Quasi-hemispherical and discoidal silicon microparticles are superior to spherical particles with respect to margination in the blood, with particles of different shapes and sizes having unique distributions in vivo. Cellular adhesion and internalization of silicon microparticles is influenced by microparticle shape and surface charge, with the latter dictating binding of serum opsonins. Based on in vitro cell studies, the internalization of porous silicon microparticles by endothelial cells and macrophages is compatible with cellular morphology, intracellular trafficking, mitosis, cell cycle progression, cytokine release, and cell viability. In vivo studies support superior therapeutic efficacy of liposomal encapsulated siRNA when delivered in multi-stage systems compared to free nanoparticles. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Nanotechnologies - Emerging Applications in Biomedicine.


Nature Biotechnology | 2016

An injectable nanoparticle generator enhances delivery of cancer therapeutics

Rong Xu; Guodong Zhang; Junhua Mai; Xiaoyong Deng; Victor Segura-Ibarra; Suhong Wu; Jianliang Shen; Haoran Liu; Zhenhua Hu; Lingxiao Chen; Yi Huang; Eugene Koay; Yu Huang; Jun Liu; Joe E. Ensor; Elvin Blanco; Xuewu Liu; Mauro Ferrari; Haifa Shen

The efficacy of cancer drugs is often limited because only a small fraction of the administered dose accumulates in tumors. Here we report an injectable nanoparticle generator (iNPG) that overcomes multiple biological barriers to cancer drug delivery. The iNPG is a discoidal micrometer-sized particle that can be loaded with chemotherapeutics. We conjugate doxorubicin to poly(L-glutamic acid) by means of a pH-sensitive cleavable linker, and load the polymeric drug (pDox) into iNPG to assemble iNPG-pDox. Once released from iNPG, pDox spontaneously forms nanometer-sized particles in aqueous solution. Intravenously injected iNPG-pDox accumulates at tumors due to natural tropism and enhanced vascular dynamics and releases pDox nanoparticles that are internalized by tumor cells. Intracellularly, pDox nanoparticles are transported to the perinuclear region and cleaved into Dox, thereby avoiding excretion by drug efflux pumps. Compared to its individual components or current therapeutic formulations, iNPG-pDox shows enhanced efficacy in MDA-MB-231 and 4T1 mouse models of metastatic breast cancer, including functional cures in 40–50% of treated mice.


Cancer Research | 2010

β-lapachone micellar nanotherapeutics for non-small cell lung cancer therapy

Elvin Blanco; Erik A. Bey; Chalermchai Khemtong; Su Geun Yang; Jagadeesh Setti-Guthi; Huabing Chen; Chase W. Kessinger; Kevin A. Carnevale; William G. Bornmann; David A. Boothman; Jinming Gao

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths with current chemotherapies lacking adequate specificity and efficacy. Beta-lapachone (beta-lap) is a novel anticancer drug that is bioactivated by NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1, an enzyme found specifically overexpressed in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Herein, we report a nanotherapeutic strategy that targets NSCLC tumors in two ways: (a) pharmacodynamically through the use of a bioactivatable agent, beta-lap, and (b) pharmacokinetically by using a biocompatible nanocarrier, polymeric micelles, to achieve drug stability, bioavailability, and targeted delivery. Beta-lap micelles produced by a film sonication technique were small ( approximately 30 nm), displayed core-shell architecture, and possessed favorable release kinetics. Pharmacokinetic analyses in mice bearing subcutaneous A549 lung tumors showed prolonged blood circulation (t(1/2), approximately 28 h) and increased accumulation in tumors. Antitumor efficacy analyses in mice bearing subcutaneous A549 lung tumors and orthotopic Lewis lung carcinoma models showed significant tumor growth delay and increased survival. In summary, we have established a clinically viable beta-lap nanomedicine platform with enhanced safety, pharmacokinetics, and antitumor efficacy for the specific treatment of NSCLC tumors.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2012

Gadolinium metallofullerenol nanoparticles inhibit cancer metastasis through matrix metalloproteinase inhibition: imprisoning instead of poisoning cancer cells

Huan Meng; Gengmei Xing; Elvin Blanco; Yan Song; Lina Zhao; Baoyun Sun; Xiaoda Li; Paul C. Wang; Alexandru Korotcov; Wei Li; Xing-Jie Liang; Chunying Chen; Hui Yuan; Feng Zhao; Zhen Chen; Tong Sun; Zhifang Chai; Mauro Ferrari; Yuliang Zhao

UNLABELLED The purpose of this work is to study the antimetastasis activity of gadolinium metallofullerenol nanoparticles (f-NPs) in malignant and invasive human breast cancer models. We demonstrated that f-NPs inhibited the production of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) enzymes and further interfered with the invasiveness of cancer cells in tissue culture condition. In the tissue invasion animal model, the invasive primary tumor treated with f-NPs showed significantly less metastasis to the ectopic site along with the decreased MMP expression. In the same animal model, we observed the formation of a fibrous cage that may serve as a physical barrier capable of cancer tissue encapsulation that cuts the communication between cancer- and tumor-associated macrophages, which produce MMP enzymes. In another animal model, the blood transfer model, f-NPs potently suppressed the establishment of tumor foci in lung. Based on these data, we conclude that f-NPs have antimetastasis effects and speculate that utilization of f-NPs may provide a new strategy for the treatment of tumor metastasis. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR In this study utilizing metallofullerenol nanoparticles, the authors demonstrate antimetastasis effects and speculate that utilization of these nanoparticles may provide a new strategy in metastatic tumor therapy.


Cancer Letters | 2013

Multistage delivery of chemotherapeutic nanoparticles for breast cancer treatment.

Elvin Blanco; Takafumi Sangai; Angela Hsiao; Silvia Ferrati; Litao Bai; Xuewu Liu; Funda Meric-Bernstam; Mauro Ferrari

Adequate drug delivery to tumors is hindered by barriers such as degradation and non-specific distribution. Nested incorporation of drug-containing nanoparticles within mesoporous silicon particles (MSVs), carriers rationally designed to enhance tumor transport, was hypothesized to result in pronounced and sustained antitumor efficacy. Paclitaxel (PTX)-containing poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(ε-caprolactone) (PEG-PCL) polymer micelles were favorably loaded within MSVs, after which drug release was significantly delayed. Antitumor efficacy analyses in mice bearing MDA-MB-468 breast tumors demonstrated significant tumor growth suppression following a single administration. Results highlight effective chemotherapeutic shuttling and site-specific controlled release afforded by MSVs, potentially translating towards improvements in patient outcomes and morbidity.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2009

Intratumoral Delivery of β-Lapachone via Polymer Implants for Prostate Cancer Therapy

Ying Dong; Shook Fong Chin; Elvin Blanco; Erik A. Bey; Wareef Kabbani; Xian Jin Xie; William G. Bornmann; David A. Boothman; Jinming Gao

Purpose: β-Lapachone (ARQ 501, a formulation of β-lapachone complexed with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin) is a novel anticancer agent with selectivity against prostate cancer cells overexpressing the NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase-1 enzyme. Lack of solubility and an efficient drug delivery strategy limits this compound in clinical applications. In this study, we aimed to develop β-lapachone–containing polymer implants (millirods) for direct implantation into prostate tumors to test the hypothesis that the combination of a tumor-specific anticancer agent with site-specific release of the agent will lead to significant antitumor efficacy. Experimental Design: Survival assays in vitro were used to test the killing effect of β-lapachone in different prostate cancer cells. β-Lapachone release kinetics from millirods was determined in vitro and in vivo. PC-3 prostate tumor xenografts in athymic nude mice were used for antitumor efficacy studies in vivo. Results: β-Lapachone killed three different prostate cancer cell lines in an NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase-1–dependent manner. Upon incorporation of solid-state inclusion complexes of β-lapachone with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin into poly(d,l-lactide-co-glycolide) millirods, β-lapachone release kinetics in vivo showed a burst release of ∼0.5 mg within 12 hours and a subsequently sustained release of the drug (∼0.4 mg/kg/d) comparable with that observed in vitro. Antitumor efficacy studies showed significant tumor growth inhibition by β-lapachone millirods compared with controls (P < 0.0001; n = 10 per group). Kaplan-Meier survival curves showed that tumor-bearing mice treated with β-lapachone millirods survived nearly 2-fold longer than controls, without observable systemic toxicity. Conclusions: Intratumoral delivery of β-lapachone using polymer millirods showed the promising therapeutic potential for human prostate tumors.


Molecular Oncology | 2011

Molecular-targeted nanotherapies in cancer: Enabling treatment specificity

Elvin Blanco; Angela Hsiao; Guillermo U. Ruiz-Esparza; Matthew G. Landry; Funda Meric-Bernstam; Mauro Ferrari

Chemotherapy represents a mainstay and powerful adjuvant therapy in the treatment of cancer. The field has evolved from drugs possessing all‐encompassing cell‐killing effects to those with highly targeted, specific mechanisms of action; a direct byproduct of enhanced understanding of tumorigenic processes. However, advances regarding development of agents that target key molecules and dysregulated pathways have had only modest impacts on patient survival. Several biological barriers preclude adequate delivery of drugs to tumors, and remain a formidable challenge to overcome in chemotherapy. Currently, the field of nanomedicine is enabling the delivery of chemotherapeutics, including repositioned drugs and siRNAs, by giving rise to carriers that provide for protection from degradation, prolonged circulation times, and increased tumor accumulation, all the while resulting in reduced patient morbidity. This review aims to highlight several innovative, nanoparticle‐based platforms with the potential of providing clinical translation of several novel chemotherapeutic agents. We will also summarize work regarding the development of a multistage drug delivery strategy, a robust carrier platform designed to overcome several biological barriers while en route to tumors.

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Mauro Ferrari

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Funda Meric-Bernstam

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Suhong Wu

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Jinming Gao

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Francisca E. Cara

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Joy Wolfram

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Brent D. Weinberg

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xuewu Liu

Houston Methodist Hospital

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