Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment

Farooq A ShiekhAvalon University School of Medicine, Willemstad, CuracaoCancer as a grave disease is becoming a larger health problem,1 and the medicines used as treatments have clear limitations.2–4 Chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery, all of which are drastic treatments, wreak havoc...

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Autor principal: Shiekh FA
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Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2013
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:4e96ed8c1c1f48f1b38697426e24255b2021-12-02T07:12:00ZPersonalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment1176-91141178-2013https://doaj.org/article/4e96ed8c1c1f48f1b38697426e24255b2013-01-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.dovepress.com/personalized-nanomedicine-future-medicine-for-cancer-treatment-a11903https://doaj.org/toc/1176-9114https://doaj.org/toc/1178-2013Farooq A ShiekhAvalon University School of Medicine, Willemstad, CuracaoCancer as a grave disease is becoming a larger health problem,1 and the medicines used as treatments have clear limitations.2–4 Chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery, all of which are drastic treatments, wreak havoc on healthy cells and tissues as well as cancerous ones.5–7 Pathophysiologically, there are more than 200 types of cancers,8,9 each with many variants.10 Some are aggressive, some are not; some are easily treated, and others are always fatal.11Unlike previous "revolutions" in the "war" on cancer that raised hope, nanomedicine is not just one more tool, it is an entire field, and the science in this area is burgeoning, and benefiting from use of modern cutting edge molecular tools.12–14 These breakthrough advancements have radically changed the perception of future medicine. Importantly, they are enabling landmark research to combine all advances, creating nanosized particles that contain drugs targeting cell surface receptors and other potent molecules designed to kill cancerous cells.15–19 If there is a case to be made for personalized medicine, cancer is it. For example, the current literature reveals the need for a great scientific effort to be made in this field.20–22 However, new paradigms are needed to interpret toxicogenomic and nanotoxicological data in order to predict drug toxicities and gain a more indepth understanding of the mechanisms of toxicity, so that more specific therapeutic targets which are essentially devoid of side effects could be selected.23,24Shiekh FADove Medical PressarticleMedicine (General)R5-920ENInternational Journal of Nanomedicine, Vol 2013, Iss default, Pp 201-202 (2013)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine (General)
R5-920
spellingShingle Medicine (General)
R5-920
Shiekh FA
Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
description Farooq A ShiekhAvalon University School of Medicine, Willemstad, CuracaoCancer as a grave disease is becoming a larger health problem,1 and the medicines used as treatments have clear limitations.2–4 Chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery, all of which are drastic treatments, wreak havoc on healthy cells and tissues as well as cancerous ones.5–7 Pathophysiologically, there are more than 200 types of cancers,8,9 each with many variants.10 Some are aggressive, some are not; some are easily treated, and others are always fatal.11Unlike previous "revolutions" in the "war" on cancer that raised hope, nanomedicine is not just one more tool, it is an entire field, and the science in this area is burgeoning, and benefiting from use of modern cutting edge molecular tools.12–14 These breakthrough advancements have radically changed the perception of future medicine. Importantly, they are enabling landmark research to combine all advances, creating nanosized particles that contain drugs targeting cell surface receptors and other potent molecules designed to kill cancerous cells.15–19 If there is a case to be made for personalized medicine, cancer is it. For example, the current literature reveals the need for a great scientific effort to be made in this field.20–22 However, new paradigms are needed to interpret toxicogenomic and nanotoxicological data in order to predict drug toxicities and gain a more indepth understanding of the mechanisms of toxicity, so that more specific therapeutic targets which are essentially devoid of side effects could be selected.23,24
format article
author Shiekh FA
author_facet Shiekh FA
author_sort Shiekh FA
title Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
title_short Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
title_full Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
title_fullStr Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
title_full_unstemmed Personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
title_sort personalized nanomedicine: future medicine for cancer treatment
publisher Dove Medical Press
publishDate 2013
url https://doaj.org/article/4e96ed8c1c1f48f1b38697426e24255b
work_keys_str_mv AT shiekhfa personalizednanomedicinefuturemedicineforcancertreatment
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