“…The aforementioned physical devices, although efficient in antigen delivery into the skin, may lead to some skin barrier damage, making them less suitable for mass vaccination under critical hygienic conditions [108,109]. As a result, there has been an increasing interest in passive delivery strategies, particularly nanocarriers, enabling antigen application to intact skin as well as improved antigen stability, sustained antigen release and increased antigenicity by mimicking the size of microorganisms [108,110,111]. Until now, different nanoparticles have been studied for this purpose, including vesicular nanocarriers (transfersomes, ethosomes, liposomes, niosomes, nanoemulsions) and solid nanoparticles (polymeric nanoparticles, silica-based nanoparticles) [92,110].…”