IIT-D identifies new drug delivery platform technology
A technology has been developed for chemotherapy applications using Red Blood Cell (RBC) membrane by a research group at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi (IIT-D) Centre for Biomedical Engineering (CBME). The technology is a significant success in achieving personalised therapy as it can be based on the RBC membrane of a patient, thereby minimising the sideeffects. The technology involves engineering the RBCs in the lab to produce smaller (nano sized) biocompatible vesicles. Drug molecules can simply be trapped inside the particle’s lipid bilayer and circulate for a longer time. This work was validated in an animal system by Prof. Neetu Singh’s lab in collaboration with Prof. Sujata Mohanty from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi. The concept utilises the body’s own cells to load multiple drugs at the same time and reach tumour sites in significant concentrations. Interestingly, this nano-RBCs platform has synthetic tunability similar to other polymeric systems or the commonly used liposomes but have proved to be more efficacious.