Nanotherapeutics against malaria: A decade of advancements in experimental models

Publication date

2024-05-14T08:14:42Z

2025-03-01T06:10:15Z

2024-03-01

2024-05-13T07:46:38Z

Abstract

Malaria, caused by different species of protists of the genus Plasmodium, remains among the most common causes of death due to parasitic diseases worldwide, mainly for children aged under 5. One of the main obstacles to malaria eradication is the speed with which the pathogen evolves resistance to the drug schemes developed against it. For this reason, it remains urgent to find innovative therapeutic strategies offering sufficient specificity against the parasite to minimize resistance evolution and drug side effects. In this context, nanotechnology-based approaches are now being explored for their use as antimalarial drug delivery platforms due to the wide range of advantages and tuneable properties that they offer. However, major challenges remain to be addressed to provide a cost-efficient and targeted therapeutic strategy contributing to malaria eradication. The present work contains a systematic review of nanotechnology-based antimalarial drug delivery systems generated during the last 10 years. This article is categorized under: Therapeutic Approaches and Drug Discovery > Nanomedicine for Infectious Disease

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Wiley Periodicals

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1002/wnan.1943

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews-Nanomedicine And Nanobiotechnology, 2024, vol. 16, num. 2

https://doi.org/10.1002/wnan.1943

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(c) Wiley Periodicals, 2024