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3 March 2016 | Cancer
NanotheranosticsFrontiers
in Chemistry biological barriers to deliver therapeutic agents directly to cells and tissues involved in cancer
growth and metastasis, and devices capable of predicting molecular changes to prevent action
against precancerous cells. Nanomaterials-based delivery systems in Theranostics (Diagnostics
& Therapy) provide better penetration of therapeutic and diagnostic substances within the
body at a reduced risk in comparison to conventional therapies. At the present time, there is a
growing need to enhance the capability of theranostics procedures where nanomaterials-based
sensors may provide for the simultaneous detection of several gene-associated conditions and
nanodevices with the ability to monitor real-time drug action. These innovative multifunctional
nanocarriers for cancer theranostics may allow the development of diagnostics systems such as
colorimetric and immunoassays, and in therapy approaches through gene therapy, drug delivery
and tumor targeting systems in cancer.
Some of the thousands and thousands of published nanosystems so far will most likely revo-
lutionize our understanding of biological mechanisms and push forward the clinical practice
through their integration in future diagnostics platforms. Nevertheless, despite the significant
efforts towards the use of nanomaterials in biologically relevant research, more in vivo studies
are needed to assess the applicability of these materials as delivery agents. In fact, only a few went
through feasible clinical trials. Nanomaterials have to serve as the norm rather than an exception
in the future conventional cancer treatments. Future in vivo work will need to carefully consider
the correct choice of chemical modifications to incorporate into the multifunctional nanocarriers
to avoid activation off-target, side effects and toxicity. Moreover the majority of studies on nano-
materials do not consider the final application to guide the design of nanomaterial. Instead, the
focus is predominantly on engineering materials with specific physical or chemical properties.
It is imperative to learn how advances in nanosystem’s capabilities are being used to identify
new diagnostic and therapy tools driving the development of personalized medicine in oncol-
ogy; discover how integrating cancer research and nanotechnology modeling can help patient
diagnosis and treatment; recognize how to translate nanotheranostics data into an actionable
clinical strategy; discuss with industry leaders how nanotheranostics is evolving and what the
impact is on current research efforts; and last but not least, learn what approaches are proving
fruitful in turning promising clinical data into treatment realities.
Citation: Conde, J., Baptista, P. V., Fuente, J. M. D. L., Tian, F., eds. (2016). Cancer Nanotheranos-
tics: What Have We Learned So Far? Lausanne: Frontiers Media. doi: 10.3389/978-2-88919-776-7
Cancer Nanotheranostics
What Have We Learnd So Far?
- Title
- Cancer Nanotheranostics
- Subtitle
- What Have We Learnd So Far?
- Authors
- João Conde
- Pedro Viana Baptista
- Jesús M. De La Fuente
- Furong Tian
- Editor
- Frontiers in Chemistry
- Date
- 2016
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-2-88919-776-7
- Size
- 21.0 x 27.7 cm
- Pages
- 132
- Keywords
- Nanomedicine, Nanoparticles, nanomaterials, Cancer, heranostics, Immunotherapy, bioimaging, Drug delivery, Gene Therapy, Phototherapy
- Categories
- Naturwissenschaften Chemie