Editorial Volume 1 Issue 3
High Complexity Foundation, Spain
Correspondence: De Lema Bruno, High Complexity Foundation, Pereira, Barcelona, Spain
Received: October 29, 2014 | Published: December 20, 2014
Citation: Larre BDL. Trojan horse, nanomedicine and oncology. J Cancer Prev Curr Res. 2014;1(4):103. DOI: 10.15406/jcpcr.2014.01.00020
Our world is increasingly miniaturized. Nanotechnology helps this goal. The advancement of nanoscience is undeniable and there is talk that nanoscience will be the second industrial revolution. One of these resources is nanodrugs. These are nanoparticles that carry drugs to specific target cells. Research in this area is of special interest in oncology.
Nanodrug is designed as an element that must have as properties:
Once the nanodrug comes to cancer cell, it is able to release its contents and meet the objective of destroying the tumor cell, although the theory is simple. Nanodrugs must overcome complex difficulties. First of all must be transported through the blood stream, they circumvent hepatic metabolism and renal excretion, as well as being "silent immune" and finally break through to the neoplastic cell to deposit their contents and destroy the tumor cell and no another. The idea is basically the Trojan horse (Figure 1). A structure apparently without destructive capacity, its interior contains the components necessary to do otherwise. Destroy a target. Doing it stealthily and unexpected. What it is clear that the oncology will not be equal when nanodrugs more frequent, yet, we finish building this Trojan horse.
None.
Author declares there are no conflicts of interest.
©2014 Larre. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.
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