Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy: Current evidence for its use in companion animals

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Standard

Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy : Current evidence for its use in companion animals. / Børresen, B.; Hansen, A. E.; Kjær, A.; Andresen, T. L.; Kristensen, A. T.

In: Veterinary and Comparative Oncology, 03.2018, p. E1-E15.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Børresen, B, Hansen, AE, Kjær, A, Andresen, TL & Kristensen, AT 2018, 'Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy: Current evidence for its use in companion animals', Veterinary and Comparative Oncology, pp. E1-E15. https://doi.org/10.1111/vco.12342

APA

Børresen, B., Hansen, A. E., Kjær, A., Andresen, T. L., & Kristensen, A. T. (2018). Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy: Current evidence for its use in companion animals. Veterinary and Comparative Oncology, E1-E15. https://doi.org/10.1111/vco.12342

Vancouver

Børresen B, Hansen AE, Kjær A, Andresen TL, Kristensen AT. Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy: Current evidence for its use in companion animals. Veterinary and Comparative Oncology. 2018 Mar;E1-E15. https://doi.org/10.1111/vco.12342

Author

Børresen, B. ; Hansen, A. E. ; Kjær, A. ; Andresen, T. L. ; Kristensen, A. T. / Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy : Current evidence for its use in companion animals. In: Veterinary and Comparative Oncology. 2018 ; pp. E1-E15.

Bibtex

@article{b73874f3675b4178bfb686e2879f0613,
title = "Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy: Current evidence for its use in companion animals",
abstract = "Cytotoxic drugs encapsulated into liposomes were originally designed to increase the anticancer response, while minimizing off-target adverse effects. The first liposomal chemotherapeutic drug was approved for use in humans more than 20years ago, and the first publication regarding its use in a canine cancer patient was published shortly thereafter. Regardless, no general application for liposomal cytotoxic drugs has been established in veterinary oncology till now. Due to the popularity of canines as experimental models for pharmacokinetic analyses and toxicity studies, multiple publications exist describing various liposomal drugs in healthy dogs. Also, some evidence for its use in veterinary cancer patients exists, especially in canine lymphoma, canine splenic hemangiosarcoma and feline soft tissue sarcoma, however, the results have not been overwhelming. Reasons for this may be related to inherent issues with the enhanced permeability and retention effect, the tumour phenomenon which liposomal drugs exploit. This effect seems very heterogeneously distributed in the tumour. Also, it is potentially not as ubiquitously occurring as once thought, and it may prove important to select patients for liposomal therapy on an individual, non-histology-oriented, basis. Concurrently, new developments with active-release modified liposomes in experimental models and humans will likely be relevant for veterinary patients as well, and holds the potential to improve the therapeutic response. It, however, does not resolve the other challenges that liposomal chemotherapy faces, and more work still needs to be done to determine which veterinary patients may benefit the most from liposomal chemotherapy.",
keywords = "Chemotherapy, Liposomes, Nanomedicine, Oncology, Small animal",
author = "B. B{\o}rresen and Hansen, {A. E.} and A. Kj{\ae}r and Andresen, {T. L.} and Kristensen, {A. T.}",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1111/vco.12342",
language = "English",
pages = "E1--E15",
journal = "Veterinary and Comparative Oncology",
issn = "1476-5810",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy

T2 - Current evidence for its use in companion animals

AU - Børresen, B.

AU - Hansen, A. E.

AU - Kjær, A.

AU - Andresen, T. L.

AU - Kristensen, A. T.

PY - 2018/3

Y1 - 2018/3

N2 - Cytotoxic drugs encapsulated into liposomes were originally designed to increase the anticancer response, while minimizing off-target adverse effects. The first liposomal chemotherapeutic drug was approved for use in humans more than 20years ago, and the first publication regarding its use in a canine cancer patient was published shortly thereafter. Regardless, no general application for liposomal cytotoxic drugs has been established in veterinary oncology till now. Due to the popularity of canines as experimental models for pharmacokinetic analyses and toxicity studies, multiple publications exist describing various liposomal drugs in healthy dogs. Also, some evidence for its use in veterinary cancer patients exists, especially in canine lymphoma, canine splenic hemangiosarcoma and feline soft tissue sarcoma, however, the results have not been overwhelming. Reasons for this may be related to inherent issues with the enhanced permeability and retention effect, the tumour phenomenon which liposomal drugs exploit. This effect seems very heterogeneously distributed in the tumour. Also, it is potentially not as ubiquitously occurring as once thought, and it may prove important to select patients for liposomal therapy on an individual, non-histology-oriented, basis. Concurrently, new developments with active-release modified liposomes in experimental models and humans will likely be relevant for veterinary patients as well, and holds the potential to improve the therapeutic response. It, however, does not resolve the other challenges that liposomal chemotherapy faces, and more work still needs to be done to determine which veterinary patients may benefit the most from liposomal chemotherapy.

AB - Cytotoxic drugs encapsulated into liposomes were originally designed to increase the anticancer response, while minimizing off-target adverse effects. The first liposomal chemotherapeutic drug was approved for use in humans more than 20years ago, and the first publication regarding its use in a canine cancer patient was published shortly thereafter. Regardless, no general application for liposomal cytotoxic drugs has been established in veterinary oncology till now. Due to the popularity of canines as experimental models for pharmacokinetic analyses and toxicity studies, multiple publications exist describing various liposomal drugs in healthy dogs. Also, some evidence for its use in veterinary cancer patients exists, especially in canine lymphoma, canine splenic hemangiosarcoma and feline soft tissue sarcoma, however, the results have not been overwhelming. Reasons for this may be related to inherent issues with the enhanced permeability and retention effect, the tumour phenomenon which liposomal drugs exploit. This effect seems very heterogeneously distributed in the tumour. Also, it is potentially not as ubiquitously occurring as once thought, and it may prove important to select patients for liposomal therapy on an individual, non-histology-oriented, basis. Concurrently, new developments with active-release modified liposomes in experimental models and humans will likely be relevant for veterinary patients as well, and holds the potential to improve the therapeutic response. It, however, does not resolve the other challenges that liposomal chemotherapy faces, and more work still needs to be done to determine which veterinary patients may benefit the most from liposomal chemotherapy.

KW - Chemotherapy

KW - Liposomes

KW - Nanomedicine

KW - Oncology

KW - Small animal

U2 - 10.1111/vco.12342

DO - 10.1111/vco.12342

M3 - Review

C2 - 29027350

AN - SCOPUS:85031330405

SP - E1-E15

JO - Veterinary and Comparative Oncology

JF - Veterinary and Comparative Oncology

SN - 1476-5810

ER -

ID: 188370006