| Literature DB >> 30625999 |
Catarina Oliveira Silva1, Jacinta Oliveira Pinho2, Joana Margarida Lopes3, António J Almeida4, Maria Manuela Gaspar5, Catarina Reis6,7.
Abstract
Theranostics has emerged in recent years to provide an efficient and safer alternative in cancer management. This review presents an updated description of nanotheranostic formulations under development for skin cancer (including melanoma), head and neck, thyroid, breast, gynecologic, prostate, and colon cancers, brain-related cancer, and hepatocellular carcinoma. With this focus, we appraised the clinical advantages and drawbacks of metallic, polymeric, and lipid-based nanosystems, such as low invasiveness, low toxicity to the surrounding healthy tissues, high precision, deeper tissue penetration, and dosage adjustment in a real-time setting. Particularly recognizing the increased complexity and multimodality in this area, multifunctional hybrid nanoparticles, comprising different nanomaterials and functionalized with targeting moieties and/or anticancer drugs, present the best characteristics for theranostics. Several examples, focusing on their design, composition, imaging and treatment modalities, and in vitro and in vivo characterization, are detailed herein. Briefly, all studies followed a common trend in the design of these theranostics modalities, such as the use of materials and/or drugs that share both inherent imaging (e.g., contrast agents) and therapeutic properties (e.g., heating or production reactive oxygen species). This rationale allows one to apparently overcome the heterogeneity, complexity, and harsh conditions of tumor microenvironments, leading to the development of successful targeted therapies.Entities:
Keywords: cancer imaging; cancer treatment; gold nanoparticles; lipid-based nanosystems; nanotheranostics; polymeric nanoparticles
Year: 2019 PMID: 30625999 PMCID: PMC6359642 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics11010022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Nanotheranostics: polymeric, metallic, and lipid-based nanosystems for cancer management.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of triple features in theranostic nanoplatforms, namely nano-sized particle, therapeutic, and diagnostic agents. Adapted with permission from Zhang P, Hu C, Ran W, Meng J, Yin Q, Li Y. Recent progress in light-triggered nanotheranostics for cancer treatment. Theranostics. 2016;6(7):948; copyright 2016 Ivyspring International Publisher [9].
Figure 3Illustration of the accumulation of nanosystems at tumor sites through an enhanced permeation and retention (EPR) effect.
Theranostics polymeric and metal-based nanoplatforms under study for clinical applications in different cancers (according to clinicaltrials.gov and clinicaltrialsregister.eu).
| Product | Company | Clinical Phase | Therapeutic Modality | Diagnostic Modality | Proposed Indication | CT Identifier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CriPec® docetaxel | Cristal Therapeutics | Phase I | Docetaxel | PET (Zirconium-89) | Solid tumors | NCT03712423 |
| AGuIX® | NHTherAguix | Phase I | Radiation therapy | MRI (gadolinium-chelates) | Brain metastases | NCT02820454 |
| AGuIX® | NHTherAguix | Phase I | Radiation therapy or brachytherapy or chemotherapy (cisplatin) | MRI (gadolinium-chelates) | Gynecologic cancer | NCT03308604 |
| Iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) | M.D. Anderson Cancer Center | Early Phase I | - | Ferumoxytol-based MRI | HNSCC | NCT01895829 |
| NBTXR3® | Nanobiotix | Phase I/II | Hafnium oxide nanoparticles (50 nm) | Radiation-stimulated technology (NanoX-Ray) via electron production | Multiple solid cancers, including head and neck cancer, rectal cancer, prostate cancer and breast cancer | NCT02805894 NCT03589339 NCT02901483 NCT02901483 NCT02465593 (Total of 5 active clinical trials) |
Abbreviations: ANZUP: Australian and New Zealand Urogenital and Prostate Cancer Trials Group. HNSCC: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. MRI: magnetic resonance imaging. PET: positron emission tomography. SPION: superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles.
Figure 4Schematic image of the dual-imaging and PTT effect on head and neck cancer from rabbit. (A) Porphysomes injected intravenously via ear vein of the rabbit; (B) at 24 h post-injection, both fluorescence and photoacoustic imaging were enabled; (C) in vivo photothermal ablation of rabbit tumor by two-step ablations (intra-tumor and transdermal); (D) the tumor was eliminated with no recurrence. Adapted with permission from Muhanna, Jin, Huynh, Chan, Qiu, Jiang, Cui, Burgess, Akens, Chen, and Irish. Phototheranostic porphyrin nanoparticles enable visualization and targeted treatment of head and neck cancer in clinically relevant models. Theranostics. 2015;5(12):1428; copyright 2015 Ivyspring International Publisher [74].
Figure 5Schematic description of Fe3O4 magnetic nanoparticles conjugated with methotrexate for triple action in imaging (MRI contract agent) and therapeutic (photothermal and chemo therapy). Adapted with permission from Zhang, Shan, Ai, Chen, Zhou, Lv, Zhou, Ye, Ren, and Wang. Construction of Multifunctional Fe3O4-MTX@HBc Nanoparticles for MR Imaging and Photothermal Therapy/Chemotherapy, Nanotheranostics. 2018; 2(1): 87–95. doi: 10.7150/ntno.21942 copyright 2018 Ivyspring International Publisher [94].
Lipid-based nanotheranostic systems in a preclinical stage of development.
| Lipid-Based System/Drug/Imaging Agent | Detection Method | Tumor | Animal Model | Observations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thermosensitive liposomes/doxorubicin/Gd-DTPA-BMA | MRI | Soft Tissue Sarcoma | Brown Norway rat syngeneic model | Liposomal content release was promoted by local application of hyperthermia. | [ |
| PEG liposomes (14C)/QDs | β Radiation; ICP-MS | Melanoma | C57BL/6 syngeneic model | Biodistribution study. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/ruthenium polypyridine complex | Fluorescence | TNBC | Athymic nude mice orthotopic model | Ruthenium polypyridine complex was used for imaging and therapy. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/PLP/Gd-DOTAMA(C18)2 | MRI | Melanoma | C57BL/6 syngeneic model | ----- | [ |
| PEG liposomes/Gadoteridol | MRI | Melanoma | C57BL/6 syngeneic model | Liposomal content release was promoted by a local application of pLINFU. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/ICG | PAI; US | Epidermoid Carcinoma | CD1 (nu/nu) xenograft model | Biodistribution study | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/ICG | MSOT | Breast; Colon | Athymic nude-Foxn1 mice xenograft model | Monoclonal antibody hCTM01 was used as a targeting moiety. | [ |
| Thermosensitive PEG liposomes/ICG | NIR | TNBC | Athymic nude mice (nu/nu) xenograft model | PDT. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/SPIONs | MRI | Breast | Transgenic mice - MMTV-PyMT | ----- | [ |
| PEG liposomes/AQ4N/photosensitizer | Fluorescence, PAI and PET | Breast | BALB/c syngeneic model | AQ4N is a hypoxia-activated prodrug. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/Gadoteridol | MRI | Breast | BALB/c syngeneic model | Liposomal content release was promoted by local application of pLINFU and/or sonoporation. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/fluorescent probe (PFBT) | Fluorescence | Breast | Nude mice xenograft model | Folate was used as a targeting moiety. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/mitoxantrone/SPIONs | MRI | Breast | Athymic nude BALB/c xenograft model | Gonadorelin, a peptide analogue of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), was used as a targeting moiety. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/NIR probe DiD | NIR | TNBC | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | A cyclic octapeptide was used as a targeting moiety. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/doxorubicin, gemcitabine, cisplatin or caffeine/DNA barcode and ICG | NIR | TNBC | BALB/c syngeneic model | Specific DNA barcodes were used to screen the therapeutic potency of each anticancer drugs using tumor biopsies. | [ |
| Temperature-sensitive PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/ICG | NIR | Breast | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | NIR laser-driven chemotherapy and PTT. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/H2O2-dependent chromogenic reaction | NIR; PAI | Glioma; Breast; Lymph node metastasis | BALB/c orthotopic and syngeneic models | ABTS was used as substrate for HRP for chromogenic reaction; NIR was used for PTT. | [ |
| Targeted pH-sensitive PEG liposomes/paclitaxel/SPIONs | MRI | Breast | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | The peptide H7K(R2)2 was used as the targeting moiety. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/siRNA/Gd-DOTA-DSA | MRI | Ovary | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | Functional delivery of anti-survivin. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/ZnPc | Fluorescence; MRI | Cervical | Nude mice xenograft model | Methotrexate was used as an FR-targeting moiety. | [ |
| Thermosensitive PEG liposomes/methotrexate; doxorubicin/fluorescent dye Cy5.5; iron oxide NPs | NIR; MRI | Cervical | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | Methotrexate used as an anticancer drug and an FR-targeting moiety. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/oxaliplatin/SRB; Gd-DTPA | Fluorescence; MRI | Colon | BALB/c syngeneic model | Porphyrin-lipid was used for the light-triggered release of liposomal content. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/HSV-TK/GCV suicide gene system/QDs | NIR | Liver | BALB/c (nu/nu) xenograft model | Folate was used as a targeting moiety. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/H2S/SPIONs; DiD | MRI; US; NIR | Liver | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | H2S is a hydrogen sulfide prodrug; ADT was used as an organic H2S donor; SPIONs were used for magnetic targeting and imaging. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/Gd3+ texaphyrin | MRI; Fluorescence | Liver | BALB/c orthotopic model | Folate was used as a targeting moiety; doxorubicin was used as a therapeutic and imaging agent. | [ |
| Thermosensitive PEG liposomes/IR820; Iohexol; Gd-DTPA | Fluorescence; MIR; CT | Glioma | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | IR820 was used as an imaging and PTT agent. | [ |
| PEG liposomes/cilengitide/QDs; SPIONs | NIR; MIR | Glioblastoma | Sprague-Dawley rat orthotopic model | ----- | [ |
| Thermosensitive PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/[Gd(HPDO3A)(H2O)] | MRI | Gliosarcoma | Fisher 344 rat syngeneic model | Liposomal content release was promoted by a local application of HIFU. | [ |
| Targeted PEG liposomes/Rituximab/SPIONs | MRI | Brain Lymphoma | Athymic nude mice xenograft model | Rituximab was used for targeting and therapy. | [ |
| Targeted PEG lipid nanoparticles/porphyrin-lipid | Fluorescence | Glioblastoma | Athymic nude mice orthotopic model | apoE3 was used as a targeting moiety and porphyrin-lipid as an imaging modality. | [ |
| Targeted SLNs/hydrophobic IR780 dye | NIR | Glioblastoma | Athymic nude mice xenograft model | Cycle RGD peptide (cRGD) was used as a targeting moiety and IR780 as an imaging and PTT agent. | [ |
| Targeted NLCs/NIR dye IR780 | NIR | Breast | BALB/c syngeneic model | NIR dye IR780 was used for imaging and PTT. | [ |
| NLCs/paclitaxel/QDs | NIR | Liver | Kunming mice syngeneic model | ----- | [ |
| Targeted nanocapsules/paclitaxel/DiD | Fluorescence | Glioblastoma | C57Bl/6 orthotopic model | NFL-TBS.40-63 (cell-penetrating peptide) was used as a targeting moiety. | [ |
| Micelles/docetaxel/NIR probe DiR | NIR | Breast | Nude BALB/c xenograft model | ----- | [ |
PEG: 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[amino(polyethylene glycol)] (DSPE-PEG); QDs: quantum dots; ICP-MS: inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry; PLP: prednisolone phosphate; Gd: gadolinium; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; pLINFU: pulsed low-intensity non-focused ultrasound; NIR: near infrared; DiR: lipophilic fluorochrome (1,1-dioctadecyl-3,3,3,3-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide); SPIONs: superparamagnetic nanoparticles; PFBT: poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-2,7-diyl-co-benzothiadiazole); NLCs: nanostructured lipid carriers; PTT: photothermal therapy; LHRH: luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; hCe6: hexadecylamine conjugated chlorin e6; PAI: photoacoustic imaging; PET: positron emission tomography; ICG: indocyanine green; MSOT: multispectral optoacoustic tomography; hCTM01: anti-MUC- 1 “humanized” monoclonal antibody (MoAb); DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid; TNBC: triple negative breast cancer; PDT: photodynamic therapy; DiD: lipophilic fluorochrome (1,1-Dioctadecyl-3,3,3,3-tetramethylindodicarbocyanine); siRNA: small interfering ribonucleic acid (RNA); Cy5.5: fluorescent dye; NPs: nanoparticles; FR: folate receptor; ZnPc: zinc phthalocyanine; apoE3: apolipoprotein E3; NFL-TBS.40-63: neurofilament derived cell-penetrating peptide; SLNs: solid lipid nanoparticles; Gd-DTPA: gadolinium-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid; CT: computerized tomography; HIFU: high intensity focused ultrasound; HSV-TK-GCV: herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene (HSV-TK) with ganciclovir (GCV); H2S = hydrogen sulfide prodrug; US: ultrasound; ADT: anethole dithiolethione; NLCs: nanostructured lipid carriers; SRB: sulforhodamine B; H2O2: hydrogen peroxide; HRP: horseradish peroxidase; ABTS: 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid); Gd-DTPA-BMA: gadolinium-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid-bis methylamine.
Liposomal nanotheranostics in clinical studies for application in different malignancies.
| Lipid-Based System/Drug/Imaging Agent | Detection Method | Cancer | Clinical Phase | CT Identifier | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/99mTc | SPECT/CT | Ovary | Early Study | N.A. | [ |
| HER2-targeted PEG liposomes/doxorubicin/64Cu | PET | Advanced Breast Cancer | Phase I | NCT01304797 | [ |
| Lyso-thermosensitive liposomes (TARDOX)/doxorubicin/US | US | Liver | Phase I | NCT02181075 | [ |
99mTc: Technetium 99m; SPECT: single-photon emission computed tomography; CT: computerized tomography; PET: positron emission tomography; US: ultrasound.
The performance of metallic, polymeric, and lipid-based nanosystems as cancer nanotheranostics.
| Type | Polymeric | Metallic * | Lipid-based | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Features | ||||
| Preparation method (complexity) | ++ | + | ++ | |
| Physico-chemical characterization (easiness) | ++ | + | +++ | |
| Stability | +++ | + | ++ | |
| Multifunctionality (possibility to apply different external stimuli) | ++ | +++ | ++ | |
| Potential toxicity | ++ | +++ | + | |
| In vivo general performance | ++ | + | +++ | |
| Scale-up (easiness) | + | ++ | + | |
| Cost | ++ | + | + | |
Classification: + low; ++ moderate; +++ high. (*) Focused on gold-nanoparticles based nanotheranostics.