Tumor metastasis is a leading cause
of breast cancer-related death.
Taxane-loaded polymeric formulations, such as Genexol PM and Nanoxel
M using poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(d,l-lactide)
(PEG-PLA) micelles as drug carriers, have been approved for the treatment
of metastatic breast cancer. Unfortunately, the physical instability
of PEG-PLA micelles, leading to poor drug loading, premature drug
leakage, and consequently limited drug delivery to tumors, largely
hinders their therapeutic outcome. Inspired by the enantiomeric nature
of PLA, this work developed stereocomplex PEG-PLA micelles through
stereoselective interactions of enantiomeric PLA, which are further
incorporated with a hypoxia-responsive moiety used as a hypoxia-cleavable
linker of PEG and PLA, to maximize therapeutic outcomes. The results
showed that the obtained micelles had high structural stability, showing
improved drug loading for effective drug delivery to tumors as well
as other tissues. Especially, they were capable of sensitively responding
to the hypoxic tumor environment for drug release, reversing hypoxia-induced
drug resistance and hypoxia-promoted cell migration for enhanced bioavailability
under hypoxia. In vivo results further showed that
the micelles, especially at a high dose, inhibited the growth of the
primary tumor and improved tumor pathological conditions, consequently
remarkably inhibiting its metastasis to the lungs and liver, while
not causing any systemic toxicity. Hypoxia-responsive stereocomplex
micelles thus emerge as a reliable drug delivery system to treat breast
cancer metastasis