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Review
. 2025 May 30:677:125640.
doi: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2025.125640. Epub 2025 Apr 24.

Injectable and implantable hydrogels for localized delivery of drugs and nanomaterials for cancer chemotherapy: A review

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Free article
Review

Injectable and implantable hydrogels for localized delivery of drugs and nanomaterials for cancer chemotherapy: A review

Manuel R Pouso et al. Int J Pharm. .
Free article

Abstract

Multiple chemotherapeutic strategies have been developed to tackle the complexity of cancer. Still, the outcome of chemotherapeutic regimens remains impaired by the drugs' weak solubility, unspecific biodistribution and poor tumor accumulation after systemic administration. Such constraints triggered the development of nanomaterials to encapsulate and deliver anticancer drugs. In fact, the loading of drugs into nanoparticles can overcome most of the solubility concerns. However, the ability of systemically administered drug-loaded nanomaterials to reach the tumor site has been vastly overestimated, limiting their clinical translation. The drugs' and drug-loaded nanomaterials' systemic administration issues have propelled the development of hydrogels capable of performing their direct/local delivery into the tumor site. The use of these macroscale systems to mediate a tumor-confined delivery of the drugs/drugs-loaded nanomaterials grants an improved therapeutic efficacy and, simultaneously, a reduction of the side effects. The manufacture of these hydrogels requires the careful selection and tailoring of specific polymers/materials as well as the choice of appropriate physical and/or chemical crosslinking interactions. Depending on their administration route and assembling process, these matrices can be classified as injectable in situ forming hydrogels, injectable shear-thinning/self-healing hydrogels, and implantable hydrogels, each type bringing a plethora of advantages for the intended biomedical application. This review provides the reader with an insight into the application of injectable and implantable hydrogels for performing the tumor-confined delivery of drugs and drug-loaded nanomaterials.

Keywords: Cancer therapy; Drug delivery systems; Implantable hydrogels; Injectable hydrogels; Local chemotherapy; Local delivery; Nanomaterials.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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