1. Academic Validation
  2. Injectable thermosensitive hydrogel co-loading with ATRi and doxorubicin for the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer

Injectable thermosensitive hydrogel co-loading with ATRi and doxorubicin for the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer

  • RSC Adv. 2025 Jun 16;15(26):20385-20396. doi: 10.1039/d5ra03120f.
Lan Wei 1 Jiaru Zhu 1 Qi Wang 1 Yuanfang He 1 Haili Yan 2 Long Gao 3 Chenyang Zhang 4 Jiangfeng Du 2 5 6
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 School of Pharmacy, Medicinal Basic Research Innovation Center of Chronic Kidney Disease, Ministry of Education, Shanxi Provincial Key Laboratory of Drug Synthesis and Novel Pharmaceutical Preparation Technology, Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan 030001 Shanxi Province China.
  • 2 Department of Medical Imaging, Shanxi Key Laboratory of Intelligent Imaging and Nanomedicine, First Hospital of Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan 030001 Shanxi Province China dujf@sxmu.edu.cn.
  • 3 Department of Oncological and Vascular Intervention, First Hospital of Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan 030001 Shanxi Province China gaolong@sxmu.edu.cn.
  • 4 Department of Biotherapy, Beijing Hospital, National Center of Gerontology, Institute of Geriatric Medicine, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Beijing 100730 China.
  • 5 Key Laboratory of Cellular Physiology at Shanxi Medical University, Ministry of Education Taiyuan 030001 Shanxi Province China.
  • 6 Collaborative Innovation Center for Molecular Imaging of Precision Medicine, Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan 030001 Shanxi Province China.
Abstract

Chemotherapy has been the first-line treatment option for Cancer. However, acquired chemo-resistance led by DNA damage repair (DDR) of Cancer cells and serious side-effects of chemotherapeutic agents are huge hurdles to effectively suppress metastatic tumors. Herein, we developed an injectable thermosensitive hydrogel for localized co-delivery of ATRi-BAY-1895344 (BAY) and doxorubicin (DOX), serving as a localized drug depot to minimize systemic toxicity while ensuring sustained tumor-specific drug release exceeding 4 days. The in vitro cumulative drug release rate of DOX and BAY reached up to 73.9% and 63.3% under pH 6.5 conditions. This study pioneers the synergistic combination of a DNA-damaging agent and Ataxia telangiectasia and RAD3-related (ATR) kinase inhibitor ATRi to disrupt the DDR pathway. The ATRi-mediated inhibition of ATR kinase effectively disrupts the replication stress response by impairing the repair of DOX-induced DNA lesions. This dual mechanism significantly enhances tumor cell vulnerability to chemotherapy, ultimately achieving an 8-fold increase in chemosensitivity compared to monotherapy regimens. In triple-negative breast Cancer models, the hydrogel-based DOX + BAY@Gel formulation achieved a tumor inhibition rate of 79.4%, significantly surpassing the 58% observed with free DOX monotherapy. This dual-action strategy overcomes chemo-resistance by disabling DDR compensatory mechanisms and prolongs tumor suppression through controlled drug release. The hydrogel platform represents a functional innovation in localized combination therapy, integrating stimuli-responsive drug delivery with DDR pathway disruption for synergistic efficacy.

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