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1 Centre for Polymer Therapeutics and
2 Tenovus Centre for Cancer Research, Welsh School of Pharmacy, Cardiff University, Redwood Building, King Edward VII Avenue, Cardiff CF10 3XF, UK
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to R Duncan; Email: DuncanR{at}cf.ac.uk)
This paper was presented at the 1st Tenovus/AstraZeneca Workshop, Cardiff (2005). AstraZeneca has supported the publication of these proceedings.
The last decade has seen successful clinical application of polymerprotein conjugates (e.g. Oncaspar, Neulasta) and promising results in clinical trials with polymeranticancer drug conjugates. This, together with the realisation that nanomedicines may play an important future role in cancer diagnosis and treatment, has increased interest in this emerging field. More than 10 anticancer conjugates have now entered clinical development. Phase I/II clinical trials involving N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide (HPMA) copolymer-doxorubicin (PK1; FCE28068
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