Polymeric drug delivery technology, which allows for
medicinal ingredients to enter a cell more easily, has advanced
considerably in recent decades. Innovative medication delivery
strategies use biodegradable and bio-reducible polymers, and progress in
the field has been accelerated by future possible research
applications. Natural polymers utilized in polymeric drug delivery
systems include arginine, chitosan, dextrin, polysaccharides,
poly(glycolic acid), poly(lactic acid), and hyaluronic acid.
Additionally, poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate), poly(N-isopropyl
acrylamide), poly(ethylenimine), dendritic polymers, biodegradable
polymers, and bioabsorbable polymers as well as biomimetic and
bio-related polymeric systems and drug-free macromolecular therapies
have been employed in polymeric drug delivery. Different synthetic and
natural biomaterials are in the clinical phase to mitigate different
diseases. Drug delivery methods using natural and synthetic polymers are
becoming increasingly common in the pharmaceutical industry, with
biocompatible and bio-related copolymers and dendrimers having helped
cure cancer as drug delivery systems. This review discusses all the
above components and how, by combining synthetic and biological
approaches, micro- and nano-drug delivery systems can result in
revolutionary polymeric drug and gene delivery devices.