| Literature DB >> 30084044 |
Francis Man1, Twan Lammers2,3,4, Rafael T M de Rosales5.
Abstract
Imaging plays a key role in the preclinical evaluation of nanomedicine-based drug delivery systems and it has provided important insights into their mechanism of action and therapeutic effect. Its role in supporting the clinical development of nanomedicine products, however, has been less explored. In this review, we summarize clinical studies in which imaging has provided valuable information on the pharmacokinetics, biodistribution, and target site accumulation of nanomedicine-based drug delivery systems. Importantly, these studies provide convincing evidence on the uptake of nanomedicines in tumors, confirming that the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect is a real phenomenon in patients, albeit with fairly high levels of inter- and intraindividual variability. It is gradually becoming clear that imaging is critically important to help address this high heterogeneity. In support of this notion, a decent correlation between nanomedicine uptake in tumors and antitumor efficacy has recently been obtained in two independent studies in patients, exemplifying that image-guided drug delivery can help to pave the way towards individualized and improved nanomedicine therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Companion diagnostic; Drug delivery; EPR; Liposome; MRI; Nanomedicine; Nanoparticle; PET; SPECT; Ultrasound
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30084044 PMCID: PMC6139024 DOI: 10.1007/s11307-018-1255-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Imaging Biol ISSN: 1536-1632 Impact factor: 3.488
Selected clinical studies of image-guided approaches to nanomedicine drug delivery
| Reference | Imaging modality | Tracer | Nanomedicine type | Drug | Disease | No. of patients | Main outcome (imaging) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lopez-Berestein | Scintigraphy | 99mTc | Liposome | None | Cancer | 7 | Safety of 99mTc-labeled liposomes |
| Turner | Scintigraphy | 111In | Liposome | None | Cancer | 24 | Liposomes for tumor detection; EPR heterogeneity |
| Presant | Scintigraphy | 111In | Liposome | None | Cancer | 130 | Liposomes for tumor detection; EPR heterogeneity |
| Khalifa | SPECT | 111In | Liposome | None | Cancer | 8 | Tumor delineation with radiolabeled liposomes |
| Stewart | SPECT | 111In | Liposome (PEG) | None | Cancer | 17 | Stealth liposome biodistribution; EPR heterogeneity |
| Koukourakis | Scintigraphy + SPECT | 99mTc | Liposome (PEG) | Doxorubicin | Cancer | 18 | Tumor uptake; EPR heterogeneity |
| Koukourakis | Scintigraphy + SPECT | 99mTc | Liposome (PEG) | Doxorubicin | Cancer | 7 | Tumor uptake; EPR heterogeneity |
| Murray | Scintigraphy | 99mTc | Liposome | Muramyl tripeptide phosphatidylethanolamine | Cancer | 4 | Tumor uptake |
| Giovinazzo | SPECT | 99mTc sulfur colloid | Liposome | Doxorubicin | Cancer | 10 | Feasibility of companion diagnostic approach |
| Dams | Scintigraphy + SPECT | 99mTc | Liposome (PEG) | None | Infection, inflammation | 35 | Sensitive method for detection of infections |
| Weers | Scintigraphy | 99mTc | Liposome | Amikacin | Infection | (healthy) 3 | Use of radiolabeled liposomes for respiratory diseases |
| Farr | Scintigraphy | 99mTc | Liposome | None | Respiratory diseases | (healthy) 4 | Use of radiolabeled liposomes for respiratory diseases |
| Bhavna | Scintigraphy | 99mTc | Nanoparticle | Salbutamol | Respiratory diseases | 10 | Lung accumulation of nanoparticulate drug |
| Lee | PET | 64Cu | Liposome | Doxorubicin | Cancer | 19 | EPR heterogeneity; superiority of imaging |
| Phillips | PET, fluorescence | 124I | Nanoparticle (Cornell dot) | None | Cancer | 5 | Rapid tumor uptake; multimodal approach useful in surgery |
| Ramanathan | MRI | Iron oxide nanoparticles (Ferumoxytol®) | Liposome | Irinotecan | Cancer | 13 | EPR heterogeneity; companion diagnostic approach |
| Lyon | Ultrasound | Liposome | Doxorubicin | Cancer | (planned) 28 |
EPR heterogeneity: variability of radiolabeled liposome uptake in tumors. Adapted with permission from the American Association for Cancer Research: Harrington et al. [19]
| Patient | Tumor | Stage | Whole body scan | SPECT | Total % injected dosea | % ID/kgb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SCC bronchus | T4N0M0 | Positive | Positive | 1.7 | 12.5 |
| 2 | SCC bronchus | T4N0M0 | Positive | Positive | 1.6 | 25.4 |
| 3 | Breast (ductal) | T4N2M1 | Negative | Negative | ||
| 4 | SCCHN | T3N2M0 | Positive | Positive | 3.5 | 46.8 |
| 5 | Breast (ductal) | T4N1M0 | Positive | Positive | 0.3 | 2.7 |
| 6 | Breast (ductal) | T4N2M1 | Positive | Positive | 1.5 | 3.9 |
| 7 | Breast (ductal) | T3N2M0 | Positive | Positive | 1.7 | 9.5 |
| 8 | SCCHN | T4N0M0 | Positive | Positive | 0.7 | 24.2 |
| 9 | SCCHN | T3N1M0 | Positive | Positive | 1.0 | 32.0 |
| 10 | SCC cervix | FIGO IIIB | Negative | Positive | NA | NA |
| 11 | Breast (ductal) | T4N2M0 | Positive | Positive | 1.4 | 5.2 |
| 12 | SCC bronchus | T2N0M1 | Negative | Negative | ||
| 13 | SCCHN | T3N2M0 | Positive | Positive | 0.6 | 9.0 |
| 14 | SCCHN | T3N0M0 | Positive | Positive | 1.6 | 53.0 |
| 15 | SCC bronchus | T3N0M1 | Positive | Positive | 2.6 | 16.7 |
| 16 | Glioma (AA) | Inoperable | Negative | Positive | NA | NA |
| 17 | Glioma (GBM) | Inoperable | Negative | Positive | NA | NA |
aTumor uptake determined from ROI on 72-h whole-body scan
bPercentage injected dose/kg calculated from estimated tumor volume
SCC, squamous cell cancer; AA, anaplastic astrocytoma (grade III); GBM, glioblastoma multiforme (grade IV); NA, not assessable (tumor uptake was only measurable from whole-body scans)
Fig. 1.Whole-body gamma camera images over 7 days of a patient with Kaposi’s sarcoma administered In-111-labeled liposomes. Areas of liposome uptake in the left foot and leg, right arm, and face corresponded with typical Kaposi’s sarcoma lesions. Prolonged retention of the radiolabel is seen despite significant clearance of circulating liposomes, as demonstrated by disappearance of the cardiac blood pool image. Adapted with permission from the American Association for Cancer Research: Harrington et al. [19].
Fig. 2.Scintigraphic planar images from four patients with sarcoma administered 99mTc-labeled liposomal doxorubicin (Caelyx®). a Clockwise from top left: fibrosarcoma of the iliac region, b angiosarcoma of the maxillary andrum, c Ewing sarcoma of the femur, d Kaposi sarcoma of the palmar area. Adapted with permission from Koukourakis et al. [21].
Fig. 3.Representative PET and fused PET/CT images of [64Cu]-MM-302 in lesions at different anatomic locations. The regions of interest used to measure tumor deposition of [64Cu]-MM-302 are shown in blue or turquoise outlines. Adapted with permission from the American Association for Cancer Research: Lee et al. [28].
Fig. 4.a Representative pseudocolored relaxometric R2* maps derived from patient images before and after administration of iron oxide nanoparticle (Ferumoxytol®, FMX). Approximate lesion locations are indicated by white lines in the image before FMX dosing. b Extrapolated FMX concentrations in individual patients 24 h after administration. Adapted with permission from the American Association for Cancer Research: Ramanathan et al. [30].