The impact of PEG chain length on the in vivo tumor accumulation of self-assembled amphiphilic drug-PEG polymeric micelles

COLLOIDS AND SURFACES A-PHYSICOCHEMICAL AND ENGINEERING ASPECTS(2024)

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Abstract
The integration of a drug and polyethylene glycol (PEG) into an amphiphilic polymer to form self-assembled micelles with high drug loading for self-delivery to tumors is recently reported, which has showed high clinical availability. However, the effect of PEG chain length on cell internalization efficiency and tumor targeting efficiency in this PEG-drug conjugate micelle self-delivery system has yet to be studied. Herein, pyropheophorbide-a (PhA) was used as a model drug and a fluorescent tracer to synthesize amphiphilic polymers with varying PEG chain lengths, which self-assembled into PhA-PEG(2000) NPs and PhA-PEG(5000) NPs with high drug loading (21.2% and 9.7%, respectively, according to calculation). The results showed that PhA-PEG(2000) NPs had higher cell internalization in vitro than PhA-PEG5000 NPs, but much lower tumor accumulation in vivo than PhA-PEG(5000) NPs. This was attributed to the longer in vivo blood circulation time of the latter. Furthermore, the in vitro and in vivo examinations revealed negligible side effects, indicating the intrinsic safety of the micelles. This study provides insight into the influence of PEG chain length on biodistribution of organs and tumor
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Key words
Polyethylene glycol,Tumor accumulation,Fluorescence imaging,PEG chain length
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