The regulation of nanomaterials and nanomedicines for clinical application: current and future perspectives
Keele University · University of Strathclyde · +1 more institution
Abstract
The use of nanomaterials in biomedicine has increased over the past 10 years, with many different nanoparticle systems being utilised within the clinical setting. With limited emerging success in clinical trials, polymeric, metallic, and lipid based nanoparticles have all found a place in medicine, with these generally providing enhanced drug efficacy or therapeutic effect compared to the standard drug treatments. Although there is great anticipation surrounding the field of nanomedicine and its influence on the pharmaceutical industry, there is currently very little regulatory guidance in this area, despite repeated calls from the research community, something that is critical to provide legal certainty to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 52
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Nanomedicine
- Nanotechnology
- Nanomaterials
- Translation (biology)
- Current (fluid)
- Risk analysis (engineering)
- Engineering ethics
- Data science