scholarly journals Targeted Drug Delivery by Radiation-Induced Tumor Vascular Modulation

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sijumon Kunjachan ◽  
Shady Kotb ◽  
Rajiv Kumar ◽  
Robert Pola ◽  
Michal Pechar ◽  
...  

Effective drug delivery is severely restricted by the presence of complex pathophysiological barriers in solid tumors. In human pancreatic adenocarcinoma, mature and hypopermeable tumor blood vessels limit the permeation and penetration of chemo or nanotherapeutics to cancer cells and substantially reduce the treatment efficacy. New, clinically-viable strategies are therefore sought to breach the neoplastic barriers that prevent optimal tumor-specific drug delivery. Here, we present an original idea to boost targeted drug delivery by selectively knocking down the tumor vascular barrier in a poorly permeable human pancreatic cancer model. For the first time, we demonstrate that clinical irradiation (10 Gy, 6 MV) can induce tumor vascular modulation when combined with tumor endothelial-targeting gold nanoparticles. Active disruption of tumor blood vessels by nanoparticle-combined radiotherapy led to increased vessel permeability and improved tumor uptake of two prototypical model nanodrugs: i) a short-circulating nanocarrier with MR-sensitive gadolinium (Gad-NC; 8 kDa; t1/2=1.5 h) and ii) a long-circulating nanocarrier with fluorescence-sensitive NIR dye (FL-NC; 30 kDa; t1/2=25 h). Functional changes in the altered tumor vessel dynamics, measured by relative changes in permeability (Ktrans), flux rate (Kep) and extracellular interstitial volume (Ve) were consistent with the concomitant increase in nanodrug delivery. This combination of radiation-induced antivascular and nanodrug-mediated anti-tumor treatment offers high therapeutic benefit for tumors with pathophysiology that restricts efficient drug delivery.

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sijumon Kunjachan ◽  
Shady Kotb ◽  
Robert Pola ◽  
Michal Pechar ◽  
Rajiv Kumar ◽  
...  

Abstract Effective drug delivery is restricted by pathophysiological barriers in solid tumors. In human pancreatic adenocarcinoma, poorly-permeable blood vessels limit the intratumoral permeation and penetration of chemo or nanotherapeutic drugs. New and clinically viable strategies are urgently sought to breach the neoplastic barriers that prevent effective drug delivery. Here, we present an original idea to boost drug delivery by selectively knocking down the tumor vascular barrier in a human pancreatic cancer model. Clinical radiation activates the tumor endothelial-targeted gold nanoparticles to induce a physical vascular damage due to the high photoelectric interactions. Active modulation of these tumor neovessels lead to distinct changes in tumor vascular permeability. Noninvasive MRI and fluorescence studies, using a short-circulating nanocarrier with MR-sensitive gadolinium and a long-circulating nanocarrier with fluorescence-sensitive nearinfrared dye, demonstrate more than two-fold increase in nanodrug delivery, post tumor vascular modulation. Functional changes in altered tumor blood vessels and its downstream parameters, particularly, changes in Ktrans (permeability), Kep (flux rate), and Ve (extracellular interstitial volume), reflect changes that relate to augmented drug delivery. The proposed dual-targeted therapy effectively invades the tumor vascular barrier and improve nanodrug delivery in a human pancreatic tumor model and it may also be applied to other nonresectable, intransigent tumors that barely respond to standard drug therapies.


2017 ◽  
Vol 517 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 269-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohaddeseh Mahmoudi Saber ◽  
Sara Bahrainian ◽  
Rassoul Dinarvand ◽  
Fatemeh Atyabi

2015 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Netanel Korin ◽  
Matthew J. Gounis ◽  
Ajay K. Wakhloo ◽  
Donald E. Ingber

2003 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. S317-S318
Author(s):  
A Cmelak ◽  
B Chak ◽  
C Scarfone ◽  
W Martin ◽  
D Hallahan

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