Submitted:
13 October 2025
Posted:
14 October 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Immune Dysregulation in Diseases Pathogenesis
2.1. Immune Surveillance in Cancer: Evasion Mechanisms
2.2. Autoimmune Diseases: Breakdown of Self-Tolerance Mechanism
2.3. Role of Chronic Inflammation and Cytokine Networks
2.4. Crosstalk Between Innate and Adaptive Immunity in Pathogenesis
3. Limitations of Conventional Immunotherapies
3.1. Non-Specific Immune Activation and Systemic Toxicity
3.2. Limited Tumor Penetration and Off-Target Effects, and Challenges in Therapeutic Durability
4. Nanomedicines: A Paradigm Shift in Immunotherapy
5. Fundamental Concepts in Immunotherapy and Nanomedicines
5.1. Mechanism of Action in Cancer vs. Autoimmune Immunotherapy
5.2. Current Immunotherapeutic Modalities
5.2.1. Cancer Immunotherapy
- Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors (ICIs): The PD-1, PD-L1 and CTLA-4 antagonistic antibodies which (by removing the inhibited immune pathways) enhance T-cell effector functions against cancer. The recent report on nanotechnology development suggested that it was possible to improve their pharmacokinetics and tumor-targeted delivery of ICIs, as well as improve the therapeutic effect and decline the systemic exposure. Despite the evidence presented in preclinical research, the possibility of nanoparticle-mediated delivery being used to decrease the burden of immune-related adverse events (irAEs) needs to be reconfirmed by being studied in clinical trials (K. Liu et al., 2022).
- CAR-T Cell Therapy: CAR-T cell therapy entails the genetic dressing of patient-derived T cells to do express chimeric antigen receptors (such as CD19 CAR-T against B-cell malignancies). Although the present manufacturing protocol is complicated requiring an ex vivo viral transduction, researchers are continuing working on the nanomaterials-based platforms such as lipid nanoparticle, polymers, hydrogels, and implantable scaffolds as a potential system to modify T cells in ex vivo (e.g., non-viral by intravenously delivering CAR-encoding nucleic acids to circulating T cells (Jogalekar et al., 2022).
- Cancer Vaccines: Cancer vaccines which are designed on personalized neoantigens which are specific to tumors and are especially when made with a nanoparticle platform allows high uptake in antigen presenting cells and provide a better cross presentation. Preclinical data indicate robust activation of CD8+ T-cells, and the data in the clinic suggestiveness. e.g., mRNA-based lipid nanoparticle vaccines against melanoma and pancreatic or kidney cancer. Nevertheless, although the nanoparticle delivery approaches may be promising, clinical validation of nanoparticle based neoantigen vaccines other than the lipid mRNA constructs is limited and underway (Trivedi et al., 2024).
- Oncolytic Viruses & Cytokine Therapies: Engineered oncolytic viruses that have been engineered to secrete cytokines (e.g., IL-2, IL-12, GM-CSF, IL-15) are often coupled with nanocarriers like nanovesicles, extrinsic coats or cell based carrier) to allow targeted co-delivery with adjuvants, minimize clearance by neutralizing antibodies and activate immune cells within the tumor microenvironment (Pearl et al., 2019).
5.2.2. Autoimmune Immunotherapy
- Cytokine Modulation: The examples of biologic therapy are anti-TNF alpha (e.g., infliximab and adalimumab), IL-6 inhibitors (e.g., tocilizumab), which act to cut down the systemic inflammatory cascade by selectively neutralizing key cytokines implicated in the pro-inflammatory signalling. These treatments are also clinically proven and effective in cytokine storm syndrome treatment, in autoimmune and inflammatory disease Treatment (Valencia et al., 2019).
- B Cell Depletion: Anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies such as rituximab destroys selectively CD20+ B cells and they are employed off-label in autoimmune diseases, such as Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) and Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Rituximab is also not FDA approved with such indications but has exhibited clinical effectiveness in specific patient categories with refractory SLE and related to relapsing multiple sclerosis and effects have been principally obtained through the immunomodulatory and cytotoxic effect the drug has had on the B cell populations itself (F. H. Du et al., 2017).
- Antigen-Specific Tolerance Induction: Autoantigens can be presented in a tolerogenic environment by the use of nanoparticles (often to dendritic Cells and including delivery of immunomodulatory agents) to induce regulatory T cells and lead to antigen-specific tolerance instead of immune activation.
- Nanoparticle-Based Tolerance Therapies: Tolerance therapies using nanoparticles based approaches are in active preclinical development with type 1 diabetics, multiple sclerosis and, to a lesser degree, rheumatoid arthritis. The majority of them are disease-specific self-antigens delivered via biodegradable polymer carrier, typically poly-lactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) and poly-lactic acid (PLA) in efforts to re-educate antigen-presenting cells, drive t cell anergy or apoptosis and increase antigen-specific regulatory T cells with or without addition of tolerogenic agents (e.g., dexamethasone or rapamycin). It has been found to be efficacious in models in animal models in EAE, and NOD mice. Although early clinical trials (e.g., TIMP platforms in celiac disease and MS) are continuing, no composition has so far obtained regulatory approval. The putative field is still plagued with the single antigenic heterogenicity, dose scheduling, and an ideal nanoparticle design associated with immune tolerance with persistence and specificity (Robinson et al., 2014).
5.3. Classification and Types of Nanomedicine
5.3.1. Liposomes and Lipid-Based Nanocarriers
5.3.2. Polymer-Based Nanoparticles
5.3.3. Inorganic Nanomaterials
5.3.4. Biomimetic and Hybrid Nanoplatforms
5.4. Nanomaterial-Immune Interactions: Safety, Biocompatibility, and Immunogenicity
6. Nanomedicine in Cancer Immunotherapy
6.1. Modulating the Tumor Immune Microenvironment and Targeting Immunosuppressive Cells
6.2. Nanocarriers for Cancer Vaccines, Neoantigen Delivery, and Immune Checkpoint Modulation
6.3. Enhancing Adoptive Cell Therapies and Combinatorial Immuno-Nano Strategies
7. Nanomedicine in Autoimmune Immunotherapy
7.1. Immune Tolerance Induction and Lymphoid targeting via Nanomedicine
7.2. Nanocarriers for Cytokine Modulation and Adaptive Immune Reprogramming
7.3. Disease-Specific Applications and Translational Nanomedicine Advances
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA):
- Multiple Sclerosis (MS):
- Type 1 Diabetes (T1D):
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE):
- Psoriasis and Inflammatory Bowl Disease (IBD):
8. Minimizing Toxicity and Enhancing Therapeutic Index
8.1. Controlled Release, targeted Delivery, and Pharmacokinetic Optimization
8.2. Reducing Off-Target Effects and Redefining Therapeutic Windows via Nanoscale Engineering
9. Emerging Technologies and Future Trends
10. Conclusion
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