Emerging Multifunctional Biomaterials for Addressing Drug Resistance in Cancer
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Date
2025
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Volume Title
Publisher
Biology
Abstract
Drug resistance remains a major barrier to effective cancer treatment, contributing
to poor patient outcomes. Multifunctional biomaterials integrating electrical and catalytic
properties offer a transformative strategy to target diverse resistance mechanisms. This
review explores their ability to modulate cellular processes, remodel the tumor microen
vironment (TME), and enhance drug delivery. Electrically active biomaterials enhance
drug uptake and apoptotic sensitivity by altering membrane potentials, ion channels, and
intracellular signaling, synergizing with chemotherapy. Catalytic biomaterials generate
reactive oxygen species (ROS), activate prodrugs, reprogram hypoxic and acidic TME, and
degrade the extracellular matrix (ECM) to improve drug penetration. Hybrid nanomaterials
(e.g., conductive hydrogels, electrocatalytic nanoparticles), synergize electrical and catalytic
properties for localized, stimuli-responsive therapy and targeted drug release, minimizing
systemic toxicity. Despite challenges in biocompatibility and scalability, future integration
with immunotherapy, personalized medicine, and intelligent self-adaptive systems capable
of real-time tumor response promises to accelerate clinical translation. The development of
these adaptive biomaterials, alongside advancements in nanotechnology and AI-driven
platforms, represents the next frontier in precision oncology. This review highlights the
potential of multifunctional biomaterials to revolutionize cancer therapy by addressing
multidrug resistance at cellular, genetic, and microenvironmental levels, offering a roadmap
to improve therapeutic outcomes and reshape oncology practice.
Description
Keywords
biomaterials, cancer, drug resistance, electrical modulation, catalytic nanomaterials, tumor microenvironment, reactive oxygen species, precision oncology
