4.4 Article

Nanoparticle-mediated photothermal therapy: A comparative study of heating for different particle types

Journal

LASERS IN SURGERY AND MEDICINE
Volume 44, Issue 8, Pages 675-684

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/lsm.22072

Keywords

cancer; gold nanorods; gold nanoshells; infrared imaging; photothermal therapy; photothermal efficiency

Funding

  1. American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery
  2. National Cancer Institute (NIH) [R01 CA132032]
  3. American Society of Laser Medicine and Surgery
  4. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA032132]

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Introduction Near-infrared (NIR) absorbing plasmonic nanoparticles enhance photothermal therapy of tumors. In this procedure, systemically delivered gold nanoparticles preferentially accumulate at the tumor site and when irradiated using laser light, produce localized heat sufficient to damage tumor cells. Gold nanoshells and nanorods have been widely studied for this purpose, and while both exhibit strong NIR absorption, their overall absorption and scattering properties differ widely due to their geometry. In this paper, we compared the photothermal response of both nanoparticle types including the heat generation and photothermal efficiency. Methods Tissue simulating phantoms, with varying concentrations of gold nanoparticles, were irradiated with a near-infrared diode laser while concurrently monitoring the surface temperature with an infrared camera. We calculated nanoshell and nanorod optical properties using the Mie solution and the discrete dipole approximation, respectively. In addition, we measured the heat generation of nanoshells and nanorods at the same optical density to determine the photothermal transduction efficiency for both nanoparticle types. Results We found that the gold nanoshells produced more heat than gold nanorods at equivalent number densities (# of nanoparticles/ml), whereas the nanorods generated more heat than nanoshells at equivalent extinction values at the irradiance wavelength. To reach an equivalent heat generation, we found that it was necessary to have similar to 36x more nanorods than nanoshells. However, the gold nanorods were found to have two times the photothermal transduction efficiency than the gold nanoshells. Conclusion For the nanoparticles tested, the nanoshells generated more heat, per nanoparticle, than nanorods, primarily due to their overall larger geometric cross-section. Conversely, we found that the gold nanorods had a higher photothermal efficiency than the gold nanoshells. In conclusion, the ideal choice of plasmonic nanoparticle requires not only per particle efficiency, but also the in vivo particle targeting ability under study. Lasers Surg. Med. 44: 675684, 2012. (c) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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