4.6 Article

Tumor vascular permeabilization using localized mild hyperthermia to improve macromolecule transport

Journal

NANOMEDICINE-NANOTECHNOLOGY BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 1487-1496

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.nano.2013.11.001

Keywords

Intravital microscopy; Macromolecular enhancement; Mild hyperthermia; Transport barriers; Vascular permeabilization

Funding

  1. Department of Defense [W81XWH-09-1-0212, W81XWH-12-1-0414]
  2. National Institutes of Health [U54CA143837, U54CA151668]
  3. CPRIT from State of Texas [RP121071]

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The abnormal tumor vasculature presents a major challenge to the adequate delivery of chemotherapeutics, often limiting efficacy. We developed a nanoparticle-based technique to deliver localized mild hyperthermia (MHT) used to transiently alter tumor vascular transport properties and enhance transport of macromolecules into tumor interstitium. The strategy involved administering and localizing accumulation of stealth gold nanorods (GNRs, 103 mu g of GNRs/g of tumor), and irradiating tumor with a low-photon laser flux (1 W/cm(2)) to generate MHT. The treatment increased vascular permeability within 24 h after treatment, allowing enhanced transport of macromolecules up to 54 nm in size. A mathematical model is used to describe changes in tumor mass transport properties where the rate of macromolecular exchange between interstitial and vascular region (R) and maximum dye enhancement (Y-max) of 23-nm dextran dye is analytically solved. During enhanced permeability, R increased by 200% while Ymax increased by 30% relative to untreated group in pancreatic CAPAN-1 tumors. MHT treatment also enhanced transport of larger dextran dye (54 nm) as assessed by intravital microscopy, without causing occlusive cellular damage. Enhanced vascular transport was prolonged for up to 24 h after treatment, but reversible with transport parameters returning to basal levels after 36 h. This study indicates that localized mild hyperthermia treatment opens a transient time-window with which to enable and augment macromolecule transport and potentially improve therapeutic efficacy. From the Clinical Editor: In this study, local intra-tumormild hyperthermia is induced using a nanoparticle-based approach utilizing stealth gold nanorods and irradiating the tumor with low-photon laser flux, resulting in locally increased vascular permeability enabling enhanced delivery of therapeutics, including macromolecules up to 54nm in size. Similar approaches would be very helpful in addressing treatment-resistant malignancies in clinical practice. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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