| Literature DB >> 28335204 |
Kondareddy Cherukula1, Kamali Manickavasagam Lekshmi2, Saji Uthaman3, Kihyun Cho4, Chong-Su Cho5, In-Kyu Park6.
Abstract
Nanotechnology has enabled the development of many alternative anti-cancer approaches, such as thermal therapies, which cause minimal damage to healthy cells. Current challenges in cancer treatment are the identification of the diseased area and its efficient treatment without generating many side effects. Image-guided therapies can be a useful tool to diagnose and treat the diseased tissue and they offer therapy and imaging using a single nanostructure. The present review mainly focuses on recent advances in the field of thermal therapy and imaging integrated with multifunctional inorganic nanoparticles. The main heating sources for heat-induced therapies are the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) in the near infrared region and alternating magnetic fields (AMFs). The different families of inorganic nanoparticles employed for SPR- and AMF-based thermal therapies and imaging are described. Furthermore, inorganic nanomaterials developed for multimodal therapies with different and multi-imaging modalities are presented in detail. Finally, relevant clinical perspectives and the future scope of inorganic nanoparticles in image-guided therapies are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: alternate magnetic field; image-guided therapy; imaging; inorganic nanoparticles; photothermal therapy; surface plasmon resonance
Year: 2016 PMID: 28335204 PMCID: PMC5302572 DOI: 10.3390/nano6040076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Scheme illustrating the potential of inorganic nanoparticles in heat-induced therapies and imaging. US: ultrasound; MR: magnetic resonance; CT: computed tomography; QD: quantum dot; UCNP: upconversion nanoparticles; CuS: copper sulfide; CNT: carbon nanotube; AMF: alternate magnetic field; ROS: reactive oxygen species.
Figure 2In vitro and in vivo micro-CT images: (A) concentration-dependent CT images of air, distilled water, and doxorubicin-loaded hollow gold nanoparticles (Dox-HGNPs); (B) X-ray absorption of Dox-HGNP and Ultravist 300; (C) cross-sectional CT image in the back skin of mice after injection of Dox-HGNPs; and (D) Ultravist 300. Reproduced with permission from [51]. Copyright Journal of Controlled Release, Elsevier, 2015.
Various types of multifunctional gold nanoparticles used in image-guided therapies.
| Nanomaterials | Therapy | Imaging modality | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ce6-loaded gold vesicles (GV-Ce6) | PTT/PDT | Fluorescence/thermal/PAI | [ |
| Ce6 conjugated aptamer functionalized gold NR | PTT/PDT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| Gold NR-photosensitizer complex (GNR-AIPcS4) | PTT/PDT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| Chitosan functionalized pluronic nanogel-loaded gold NRs and Ce6 | PTT/PDT | Thermal/fluorescence imaging | [ |
| Gold nanoshelled microcapsules | PTT | Thermal/ultrasound imaging (USI) | [ |
| Cyclic RGD conjugated gold nanostar (RGD-GNS) | PTT | Thermal/PAI | [ |
| Gold NRs and conjugated poly(styrene-alt-maleic acid) and ICG | PTT | Two-photon luminescence | [ |
| CD44v6-conjugated PEG-modified gold nanostars | PTT | PAI/ Infrared microscopic imaging | [ |
| Gold NR-encapsulated protein-shell microbubbles | PTT | PAI/two-photon fluorescence | [ |
| Gold-poly dopa core-petal nanostructures | PTT/PDT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| Gold nanostars | PTT/PDT | X-ray imaging/fluorescence imaging | [ |
| Methylene blue-loaded gold NR-SiO2 core-shell nanocomposites | PTT/PDT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| (MB-GNR@SiO2) | |||
| Chlorin e6 conjugated gold nanostars (GNS-PEG-Ce6) | PTT/PDT | Fluorescence imaging/US imaging/PAI | [ |
| Super paramagnetic Fe3O4 welding on Au shells with polyphosphazene as coating agent | PTT | MRI | [ |
| Gold colloids coated on polystyrene sphere modified with chitosan and containing Fe3O4 | PTT | MRI/dark field imaging | [ |
| Hyaluronic acid-modified Fe3O4—Au core/shell nanostars | PTT | MRI/CT/thermal imaging | [ |
| Core-shell Fe3O4—mSiO2 nanoparticles | PTT | MRI | [ |
| Core-shell structure | PTT | MRI/CT | [ |
| Core: Gold nanoparticles coated with polydopamine | |||
| Shell: ICG and functionalized lipids with gadolinium and lactobionic acid |
Figure 3In vivo multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) imaging. (a–e) MSOT images of tumor before and after intravenous injection with Bi2S3 nanorods (NRs); and (f) photoacoustic signal intensity in tumor at different time points. Reproduced with permission from [105]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2015.
Therapeutic and imaging potential of CuS nanoparticles.
| Nanomaterials | Therapy | Imaging Modality | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copper sulfide nanodot (CuS) | PTT | Positron emission tomography (PET) | [ |
| Folic acid onto the surface of mesoporous silica-coated core-shell-shell upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) with Dox loading | PTT/chemo therapy | Up-conversion luminescence (UCL), CT, and MRI | [ |
| Chelator-free multifunctional (64Cu) CuS nanoparticles | PTT | Micro-PET/CT | [ |
| Ultrasmall Cu(2− | PTT | PAI | [ |
| Dox-loaded Cu9S5@mSiO2@Fe3O4-PEG | PTT/chemo therapy | MRI | [ |
| PEGylated CuS nanoparticles | PTT | PAI | [ |
| Ultrasound-targeted microbubbles depositing CuS nanoparticles | PTT | USI | [ |
Figure 4(A) Thermal images acquired after the intratumoral injection of nanocubes and the application of magnetic hyperthermia (MHT), near-infrared (NIR)-laser irradiation, or dual-mode treatment (both effects); (B) thermal elevation curves for the non-injected tumor in the dual condition; (C) average final temperature increase obtained on day 0 (1h after injection) and one and two days after injection for non-injected tumors; and (D) average tumor growth in nanocube-injected mice. Reproduced with permission from [143]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2015.
Graphene nanoparticles in cancer theranostics.
| Nanomaterials | Therapy | Imaging modality | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| rGO-loaded ultra small plasmonic gold NR vesicle | PTT | Ultrasound/photoacoustic | [ |
| Graphene oxide/manganese ferrite nanohybrids | PTT/drug | MRI | [ |
| Iodine-labelled rGO | PTT/radiotherapy | Gamma imaging | [ |
| Indocyanine green loaded onto hyaluronic acid-anchored rGO(HArGO) nanosheets (ICG/HArGO) | PTT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| 2-chloro-3-4-dihydroxyacetophenone quaternized poly(ethylene glycol)-grafted poly(DMAEMA-co-NIPAAm) (CPPDN)-complexed Indocyanine green (ICG-CPPDN/rGO) | PTT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| Nano-graphene oxide—Tf-FITC | PTT | Fluorescence imaging | [ |
| rGO-coated gold NRs | PTT | PAI | [ |
| Graphene oxide—BaGdF5 nanocomposites | PTT | MRI/ X-ray CT imaging | [ |
| Graphene oxide modified with iron oxide nanoparticles (GO-IONP) | PTT | MRI | [ |
| Carboxylated photoluminescent graphene nanodots | PTT/PDT | Photoluminescence | [ |
| Tris(2,2′-bipyridyl)ruthenium-(II)chloride (Rubpy)/GO nanohybrid | PTT | Surface-enhanced Raman scattering imaging | [ |
| IL-13 peptide-modified magnetic graphene-based mesoporous silica (MGMSPI) | PTT/drug | MRI | [ |
| BSA-functionalized nano-rGO | PTT | PAI | [ |
| Graphene oxide—iron oxide nanoparticle-gold nanocomposite (GO-IONP-Au) | PTT | MRI/X-ray imaging | [ |
| Graphene-oxide-modified PLA microcapsules | PTT | Ultrasonic/CT Imaging | [ |
| rGO—iron oxide nanoparticle (IONP) nanocomposite non-covalently functionalized with PEG (RGO–IONP–PEG) | PTT | MRI/PAI | [ |
Figure 5Multimodal in vivo imaging of quantum rattles (QRs): (A) NIR fluorescent intensity in the areas where QRs (red) and non-fluorescent hollow mesoporous silica shells (HS) control (blue); (B) MR image obtained following the injection of QRs; and 3D photoacoustic images of tumors acquired at 670 nm before (C) and after (D) the injection of QRs. Reproduced with permission from [191]. Copyright Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2015.