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Title
Inorganic nanoparticle-based treatment approaches for colorectal cancer: recent advancements and challenges
Type Article
Keywords
NADARAD
Abstract
Colorectal cancer, the third most prevalent cancer globally, contributes significantly to mortality rates, with over 1.9 million reported cases and nearly 935,000 fatalities annually. Surgical resection is a primary approach for localized colorectal tumors, with adjunct therapies like chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and targeted/immunotherapy considered depending on the tumor stage. However, despite preferences for targeted and immunotherapy post-surgery, chemotherapy remains commonly chosen due to its lower cost and high cancer-killing efficiency. Yet, chemotherapy faces issues such as tumor resistance and severe side effects. Nanotechnology has emerged in cancer therapy by alleviating the drawbacks of current treatment approaches. In the past few decades, inorganic nanoparticles have shown promise in combating colorectal cancer, offering advantages over conventional chemotherapy. Compared to organic nanoparticles, inorganic nanoparticles exhibit properties like photosensitivity, conductivity, magnetic allure, and thermal proficiency, allowing them to function as both drug carriers and therapeutic agents. Derived primarily from carbon, silica, metals, and metal oxides, they offer superior drug-loading capacity, heightened quantum yield, and participation in advanced photothermal and photodynamic therapies. This review provides a brief overview of the pathophysiology of colorectal cancer and the pivotal role of inorganic nanoparticles in photothermal therapy photodynamic therapy, and drug delivery. Additionally, it discusses numerous inorganic nanoparticles in colorectal cancer therapy based on recent literature.
Researchers Soumya Narayana (First researcher) , B.H. Jaswanth Gowda (Second researcher) , Umme Hani (Third researcher) , Sharmin Sultana Shimu (Fourth researcher) , Karthika Paul (Fifth researcher) , Avinaba Das (Not in first six researchers) , Sumel Ashique (Not in first six researchers) , Mohammed Gulzar Ahmed (Not in first six researchers) , Maryam Abbasi Tarighat (Not in first six researchers) , gholamreza Abdi (Not in first six researchers)