Conventional drug delivery often relies on passive diffusion or chemical triggers, which may lead to systemic exposure, toxicity, and decreased therapeutic performance. While stimuli-responsive systems such as light, heat, and magnetic fields have been explored, each encounters limitations including limited penetration, high invasiveness, or biological incompatibility. Ultrasound, on the other hand, provides a tunable, non-invasive physical trigger capable of penetrating deep tissues while avoiding damage to surrounding cells. Moreover, advances in polymer mechanochemistry have demonstrated that ultrasound-induced shear forces can drive selective molecular bond cleavage to activate drugs only when needed. Due to these challenges and opportunities, deeper research is required to develop ultrasound-controlled, efficient, and safe clinical drug activation platforms.
Researchers from Tianjin University have published a comprehensive review (DOI: 10.1007/s10118-025-3398-3) on ultrasound-induced drug activation systems in the Chinese Journal of Polymer Science (Published online: 2025). The study summarizes how ultrasound triggers mechanical forces and reactive oxygen species (ROS) to selectively cleave chemical bonds within polymer-based drug carriers, enabling precise, controllable therapeutic release. This work highlights a growing field that merges materials science, mechanochemistry, nanomedicine, and biomedical engineering to advance next-generation targeted drug therapies.
The review outlines three major mechanochemical pathways for ultrasound-activated drug release. First, covalent bond cleavage systems—such as disulfide-based or furyl carbonate mechanisms—enable selective drug activation by breaking chemical linkages embedded within polymer chains. These systems allow precise control of drug release kinetics but often require specific polymer designs or ultrasonic intensities. Second, non-covalent disruption systems, including supramolecular cages, polyvalent aptamer chains, and vancomycin–peptide assemblies, utilize weaker intermolecular forces that require lower activation thresholds and are more compatible with biological conditions. Third, nanomaterial-based ROS activation systems leverage ultrasound to generate ROS that trigger secondary chemical reactions for controlled drug release, particularly in tumor environments.
Additionally, emerging platforms such as rotaxane molecular actuators, polymer microbubbles, and high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU)-responsive hydrogels offer promising strategies for increasing payload capacity and minimizing off-target activation. While these technologies have demonstrated strong potential in controlled release and spatially targeted drug therapy, further optimization is needed to improve drug-loading efficiency, enhance biocompatibility, and ensure clinical safety.
According to the authors, integrating ultrasound with mechanochemically engineered polymer systems represents a transformative opportunity in precision medicine. They emphasize that mechanochemical activation provides “submolecular resolution,” enabling drug release only where external forces are applied. However, the development of clinically viable formulations requires advancing sonosensitizer safety, tuning ultrasound parameters for tissue compatibility, and improving nanocarrier design. The researchers predict that continued progress will move ultrasound-triggered therapies from proof-of-concept laboratory demonstrations into real-world disease treatment.
Ultrasound-controlled drug activation holds broad potential for cancer therapy, regenerative medicine, and localized disease treatment. By allowing therapeutic molecules to remain inactive until triggered at the target site, these systems may reduce systemic toxicity and improve treatment outcomes. Future applications could include implantable ultrasound-responsive biomaterials, personalized treatment guided by imaging techniques, and multi-step drug activation strategies for combination therapy. Continued interdisciplinary research will help translate these mechanochemical platforms into clinically deployable technologies, advancing safer and more precise therapeutic interventions.
###
References
DOI
10.1007/s10118-025-3398-3
Original Source URL
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10118-025-3398-3
Funding information
This work was financially supported by the Young Scientists Fund of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 22305173), Young Scientists Fund of the Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin (No. S25QNM009), Tianjin University Independent Innovation Fund (No. 2025XSU-0008), National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 22475151), and Xiaomi Young Talents Program.
About Chinese Journal of Polymer Science
Chinese Journal of Polymer Science (CJPS) is a monthly journal published in English and sponsored by the Chinese Chemical Society and the Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences. CJPS is edited by a distinguished Editorial Board headed by Professor Qi-Feng Zhou and supported by an International Advisory Board in which many famous active polymer scientists all over the world are included. Manuscript types include Editorials, Rapid Communications, Perspectives, Tutorials, Feature Articles, Reviews and Research Articles. According to the Journal Citation Reports, 2024 Impact Factor (IF) of CJPS is 4.0.