• 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 43 (2), 546-550
Abstract
When used as drug carrier, anionic liposomes can reduce the chronic cardiac toxicity and increase the antileukemic activity of doxorubicin (DXN; Adriamycin). Continuing investigations, reported here, have now established the therapeutic benefits of this mode of drug delivery. Liposome encapsulation caused a prolonged elevation in DXN plasma levels and a 2-fold reduction in the exposure of cardiac tissue to the drug. This reduction, however, was not proportional to the substantial decrease in chronic heart toxicity observed in the earlier study. In vivo studies have demonstrated that the entrapped drug retains its full activity against Sarcoma 180 and significantly increases its action against Lewis lung carcinoma, as measured by reduced tumor volume. The increased antineoplastic activity was again not proportional to the increased association of drug with tumor tissue. The effect of liposome entrapment on the immune-suppressive activity of DXN was also examined to determine if factors other than the direct delivery of drug to tumor tissue might improve the therapeutic response. The suppression of the humoral immune response and peripheral leukocyte counts by free DXN was nearly abolished when the drug was administered in the liposome form. These experiments suggest that the improved therapeutic effect of encapsulation may be the outcome of 3 mechanisms: altered disposition into subcellular compartments, which reduces cardiotoxicity; increased plasma drug exposure to tumor cells; and significant reduction in the immune suppressive activity of DXN.