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Improved tumour delivery of iron oxide nanoparticles for magnetic hyperthermia therapy of melanoma via ultrasound guidance and 111 In SPECT quantification.

Authors :
Patrick PS
Stuckey DJ
Zhu H
Kalber TL
Iftikhar H
Southern P
Bear JC
Lythgoe MF
Hattersley SR
Pankhurst QA
Source :
Nanoscale [Nanoscale] 2024 Oct 31; Vol. 16 (42), pp. 19715-19729. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Oct 31.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Magnetic field hyperthermia relies on the intra-tumoural delivery of magnetic nanoparticles by interstitial injection, followed by their heating on exposure to a remotely-applied alternating magnetic field (AMF). This offers a potential sole or adjuvant route to treating drug-resistant tumours for which no alternatives are currently available. However, two challenges in nanoparticle delivery currently hinder the effective clinical translation of this technology: obtaining enough magnetic material within the tumour to enable sufficient heating; and doing this accurately to limit or avoid damage to surrounding healthy tissue. A further complication is the lack of established methods to non-invasively quantify nanoparticle biodistribution, which is necessary to evaluate the performance of improved delivery strategies. Here we employ <superscript>111</superscript> In radiolabelling and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) to non-invasively quantify distribution of a clinical grade iron-oxide-based nanoparticle in a mouse model of melanoma. We show that compared to manual injection, ultrasound guided delivery together with syringe-pump-controlled infusion improves both the nanoparticle concentration within the tumour, and the accuracy of delivery - reducing off-target peri-tumoural delivery. Following AMF heating, injected melanomas shrank significantly compared to non-injected controls, validating therapeutic efficacy. Systemic off-target delivery was quantified and extrapolated to predict off-target energy absorbance within safe limits for the main sites of background accumulation. With many nanoparticle-based therapies currently in development for cancer, this image-guided delivery strategy has wide potential impact beyond the field of magnetic hyperthermia. Future use in representative patient cohorts would also be enabled by the high clinical availability of both SPECT and ultrasound imaging.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2040-3372
Volume :
16
Issue :
42
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nanoscale
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39044561
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d4nr00240g