| Literature DB >> 28066513 |
Yu Mi1, Zhiying Shao2, Johnny Vang1, Orit Kaidar-Person1, Andrew Z Wang1.
Abstract
Radiotherapy has been an integral treatment modality for cancer. The field arose from and progressed through innovations in physics, engineering, and biology. The evolution of radiation oncology will rely on the continued adoption of advances from other fields. A new area of science that possesses the ability to impact radiation oncology is nanomedicine. Materials on the nanoscale provide many unique properties such as enhanced permeability and retention effect and superparamagnetism that are well suited for applications in radiation oncology. In this review, we will provide a comprehensive summary on how nanotechnology can improve cancer radiotherapy in aspects of treatment delivery and monitoring as well as diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer nanotechnology; Combination therapy; Image-guided radiotherapy; Radioisotope; Radiosensitizer; Radiotherapy
Year: 2016 PMID: 28066513 PMCID: PMC5167776 DOI: 10.1186/s12645-016-0024-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Nanotechnol ISSN: 1868-6958
Fig. 1Characterization of NP Wtmn. a Cartoon of NP Wtmn depicting a PLGA core containing Wtmn surrounded by a lipid monolayer (green head groups) and a PEG shell. b TEM image of NP Wtmn. c Release profile of NP Wtmn in PBS at 37 °C. Error bars correspond to SD of three separate sample preparations with duplicate samples per data point (Karve et al. 2012)
Fig. 2Improving cancer chemoradiotherapy treatment by dual controlled release of wortmannin and docetaxel in polymeric nanoparticles (Au et al. 2015a, b)
Fig. 33D reconstruction based on CT images of canine patient with injected nanogel. Nanogel composed of SAIB/EtOH/PLA (75:20:5) + 30 mg PNIPAM-coated AuNPs mL − 1 administered intratumorally into a canine suffering from an intermediate-grade subcutaneous mast cell tumor (maximum distance (x × y × z); 1.82 × 5.81 × 5.32 cm3, CT volume; 31.64 cm3) adherent to the underlying soft tissue located over the dorsal aspect of the left shoulder blade. a Full-body scan of the canine. Area of interest indicated with a red box. b–d Nanogel visualized from different angles (Jolck et al. 2015)