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Review
. 2022 Jan:341:1-15.
doi: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2021.11.015. Epub 2021 Nov 13.

Inhalation delivery of repurposed drugs for lung cancer: Approaches, benefits and challenges

Affiliations
Review

Inhalation delivery of repurposed drugs for lung cancer: Approaches, benefits and challenges

Popat Kumbhar et al. J Control Release. 2022 Jan.

Abstract

Lung cancer (LC) is one of the leading causes of mortality accounting for almost 25% of cancer deaths throughout the world. The shortfall of affordable and effective first-line chemotherapeutics, the existence of resistant tumors, and the non-optimal route of administration contribute to poor prognosis and high mortality in LC. Administration of repurposed non-oncology drugs (RNODs) loaded in nanocarriers (NCs) via inhalation may prove as an effective alternative strategy to treat LC. Furthermore, their site-specific release through inhalation route using an appropriate inhalation device would offer improved therapeutic efficacy, thereby reducing mortality and improving patients' quality of life. The current manuscript offers a comprehensive overview on use of RNODs in LC treatment with an emphasis on their inhalation delivery and the associated challenges. The role of NCs to improve lung deposition and targeting of RNODs via inhalation are also elaborated. In addition, information about various RNODs in clinical trials for the treatment of LC, possibility for repurposing phytoceuticals against LC via inhalation and the bottlenecks associated with repurposing RNODs against cancer are also highlighted. Based on the reported studies covered in this manuscript, it was understood that delivery of RNODs via inhalation has emerged as a propitious approach. Hence, it is anticipated to provide effective first-line treatment at an affordable cost in debilitating LC from low and middle-income countries (LMIC).

Keywords: Clinical trials; Drug repurposing; Inhalable drug delivery; Inhalation devices; Lung cancer; Nanocarriers.

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