| Literature DB >> 28504409 |
Dyego Miranda1, Kevin Carter1, Dandan Luo1, Shuai Shao1, Jumin Geng1, Changning Li1, Upendra Chitgupi1, Steven G Turowski2, Nasi Li3, G Ekin Atilla-Gokcumen3, Joseph A Spernyak4, Jonathan F Lovell1.
Abstract
Intratumoral (IT) drug injections reduce systemic toxicity, but delivered volumes and distribution can be inconsistent. To improve IT delivery paradigms, porphyrin-phospholipid (PoP) liposomes are passively loaded with three hydrophilic cargos: sulforhodamine B, a fluorophore; gadolinium-gadopentetic acid, a magnetic resonance (MR) agent; and oxaliplatin, a colorectal cancer chemotherapeutic. Liposome composition is optimized so that cargo is retained in serum and storage, but is released in less than 1 min with exposure to near infrared light. Light-triggered release occurs with PoP-induced photooxidation of unsaturated lipids and all cargos release concurrently. In subcutaneous murine colorectal tumors, drainage of released cargo is delayed when laser treatment occurs 24 h after IT injection, at doses orders of magnitude lower than systemic ones. Delayed light-triggering results in substantial tumor shrinkage relative to controls a week following treatment, although regrowth occurs subsequently. MR imaging reveals that over this time frame, pools of liposomes within the tumor migrate to adjacent regions, possibly leading to altered spatial distribution during triggered drug release. Although further characterization of cargo loading and release is required, this proof-of-principle study suggests that multimodal theranostic IT delivery approaches hold potential to both guide injections and interpret outcomes, in particular when combined with chemo-phototherapy.Entities:
Keywords: chemo-phototherapy; intratumoral; light-triggered; liposomes; oxaliplatin
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28504409 PMCID: PMC5568974 DOI: 10.1002/adhm.201700253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Healthc Mater ISSN: 2192-2640 Impact factor: 9.933