| Literature DB >> 21461349 |
M Kohandel1, C A Haselwandter, M Kardar, S Sengupta, S Sivaloganathan.
Abstract
The combination of cytotoxic therapies and antiangiogenic agents is emerging as a most promising strategy in the treatment of malignant tumors. However, the timing and sequencing of these treatments seem to play essential roles in achieving a synergic outcome. Using a mathematical modeling approach that is grounded on available experimental data, we investigate the spatial and temporal targeting of tumor cells and neovasculature with a nanoscale delivery system. Our model suggests that the experimental success of the nanoscale delivery system depends crucially on the trapping of chemotherapeutic agents within the tumor tissue. The numerical results also indicate that substantial further improvements in the efficiency of the nanoscale delivery system can be achieved through an adjustment of the temporal targeting mechanism.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21461349 PMCID: PMC3065043 DOI: 10.1155/2011/790721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Math Methods Med ISSN: 1748-670X Impact factor: 2.238
Figure 1Confocal micrographs of tissue cross sections harvested from tumor-bearing mice at 24 h after injection with imaging-nanocells. Mice were injected with nanocells labeled with semiconductor nanocrystals (quantum dots) to monitor the distribution and leakage from the vessels in the tumor and normal tissues. The sections were immunostained for von Willebrand Factor (vWF) to delineate vasculature. Images were captured using a Zeiss LSM510 confocal microscope at 512 × 512 pixel resolution. The sections were excited with a 488 nm laser, and emission was absorbed at FITC (vWF) and Rhodamine (QD) wavelengths. The nanocells were found to be spatially restricted within normal vasculature as seen in the overlap (yellow) of the red and green signal in the merge images but extravasate out from the tumor vasculature at 24 h as seen by the predominantly red signal (merge).
Numerical values for the parameters in (1) and (9) used in our simulations. In addition to the values shown, we use in the dimensionful equations D 1 = 0.32 mm2/day for lung cancer and D 1 = 0.46 mm2/day for melanoma, ρ = 0.35 day−1 for both melanoma and lung cancer (see Section 3.1), and a threshold for the detectability of tumor cells c = 0.09 [22]. As explained in the main text we have and . The effectiveness of chemotherapy and antiangiogenic therapy are parameterized by and for lung cancer, and by and for melanoma (see Section 3.1).
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| 1.1 | 0.005 | –1 | 3 | –2 | 0.9 | 0.8 |
| 0.02 | 1300 | 3 | 0.1 | 8 |
Figure 2Curves for the tumor volume of (a) lung cancer and (b) melanoma obtained with no treatment (V), nanocells containing only doxorubicin (NC[D]), liposomes containing only combretastatin (L[C]), liposomes with combretastatin and doxorubicin (L[CD]), nanocells with combretastatin and doxorubicin (NC[CD]) and nanocells with combretastatin and doxorubicin but with a delayed release of doxorubicin (NC[CD] and p NC = 0.8). The solid curves are obtained by integrating (1)–(6) in Section 2, and the data points are taken from the experiments by Sengupta et al. [19]. The same total amount of drugs is released by liposomes and nanocells for the combined therapeutic strategies, which corresponds to double the amount released for NC[D] and L[C] individually.
Figure 3Mechanisms for the temporal targeting of tumor cells and neovasculature. (a) Nanocells are delivered to the tumor tissue through the neovasculature and rapidly release antiangiogenic agents. (b) The vascular collapse leads to the trapping of the chemotherapeutic agents within the tumor tissue and thereby prevents reabsorption into the bloodstream. According to our mathematical model this is the principal mechanism responsible for the superior results of the nanocell treatment found by Sengupta et al. [19]. (c) The normalization of tumor blood vessels produced by the antiangiogenic therapy leads to a transient “window of opportunity” [2] during which the delivery of nanocells into the tumor tissue is enhanced. (d) Our model suggests that through a judicious timing of the release profiles the interplay between normalization and vascular collapse can be utilized to improve the efficacy of the nanocell treatment.