Engineering combination nanomedicines to overcome cancer resistance
Review article, 2026

Combination nanomedicine enables the coordinated delivery of multiple therapeutic agents using engineered nanosystems to address tumor heterogeneity, multidrug resistance, and systemic toxicity. Despite extensive preclinical progress, many combination nanomedicine strategies fail to translate clinically due to poor pharmacokinetic coordination, limited predictive models, and manufacturing constraints. This review examines design principles for co-delivery platforms based on liposomal, polymeric, inorganic, hybrid, and biomimetic carriers, with attention to pharmacokinetics, biodistribution, endosomal escape, and interactions with the tumor microenvironment. Strategies integrating chemotherapy, immunotherapy, gene- and RNA-based therapies, photodynamic and photothermal modalities, and selected natural compounds are summarized to achieve synergistic therapeutic effects. Stimuli-responsive and actively targeted systems are highlighted for precise release and improved tumor accumulation. Translational progress from preclinical studies to clinical experience, including opportunities and constraints related to manufacturing reproducibility, quality control, immunogenicity, and long-term fate were discussed. Overall, combination nanomedicine shows promise for improving efficacy and safety in cancer therapy, and future work should prioritize modular, clinically scalable platforms, standardized characterization, clinically relevant models, and pathways for scalable production and regulatory evaluation.

Author

Hina Singh

UCR School of Medicine

Sri Renukadevi Balusamy

Sejong University

Johan Sukweenadhi

University of Surabaya

Anupama Shrivastav

ITM Vocational University

Aruchamy Mohanprasanth

Saveetha Dental College And Hospitals

Muthupandian Saravanan

University of Tabuk

Ivan Mijakovic

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Novo Nordisk Foundation

Priyanka Singh

Novo Nordisk Foundation

RSC Advances

20462069 (eISSN)

Vol. 16 6 5128-5167

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Pharmaceutical Sciences

Pharmacology and Toxicology

Cancer and Oncology

DOI

10.1039/d5ra08728g

PubMed

41584112

More information

Latest update

2/2/2026 3