Hype vs. Health: How Approved Nanomedicines Have Met (or Missed) Early Predictions
Eleonore Fröhlich

TL;DR
This paper reviews how nanomedicine has met or missed early predictions, highlighting successes and remaining challenges in the field.
Contribution
The paper systematically compares approved nanomedicines to early predictions and identifies key areas needing improvement.
Findings
Some early nanomedicine promises like drug delivery have been realized, but others like active targeting remain unfulfilled.
Nanotoxicity and life cycle analyses are critical for future nanomedicine approval and development.
In silico tools are increasingly used in nanodrug design and manufacturing.
Abstract
Two decades after the first bold proclamations that nanomedicine would deliver “magic-bullet” therapies capable of cell-level targeting, the field stands at a crossroads. While some initial promises (improved delivery of poorly water-soluble drugs and enhanced efficacy and biocompatibility of nano-based devices) have been fulfilled, other early promises (active targeting, biodegradability, multifunctionality, triggered responses, real-time data output, and implantable sensors) remain only partially realized. This article will compare the properties of approved nano-based products to those of the ideal products, assess the shortcomings of existing nano-based products, and discuss critical issues in nanotoxicity (biodistribution and protein corona effects, immune interactions, and biopersistence) and the lack of data on product and end-of-life life cycle analyses. The role of in silico…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanoparticle-Based Drug Delivery · Nanoparticles: synthesis and applications · Graphene and Nanomaterials Applications
