| Literature DB >> 24572574 |
Bryan Q Spring1, Adnan O Abu-Yousif, Akilan Palanisami, Imran Rizvi, Xiang Zheng, Zhiming Mai, Sriram Anbil, R Bryan Sears, Lawrence B Mensah, Ruth Goldschmidt, S Sibel Erdem, Esther Oliva, Tayyaba Hasan.
Abstract
Drug-resistant micrometastases that escape standard therapies often go undetected until the emergence of lethal recurrent disease. Here, we show that it is possible to treat microscopic tumors selectively using an activatable immunoconjugate. The immunoconjugate is composed of self-quenching, near-infrared chromophores loaded onto a cancer cell-targeting antibody. Chromophore phototoxicity and fluorescence are activated by lysosomal proteolysis, and light, after cancer cell internalization, enabling tumor-confined photocytotoxicity and resolution of individual micrometastases. This unique approach not only introduces a therapeutic strategy to help destroy residual drug-resistant cells but also provides a sensitive imaging method to monitor micrometastatic disease in common sites of recurrence. Using fluorescence microendoscopy to monitor immunoconjugate activation and micrometastatic disease, we demonstrate these concepts of "tumor-targeted, activatable photoimmunotherapy" in a mouse model of peritoneal carcinomatosis. By introducing targeted activation to enhance tumor selectively in complex anatomical sites, this study offers prospects for catching early recurrent micrometastases and for treating occult disease.Entities:
Keywords: activatable imaging agent; activatable therapeutic agent; molecular imaging; ovarian cancer; photodynamic therapy
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24572574 PMCID: PMC3956156 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1319493111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205