4.7 Article

Pulsed-laser irradiation of multifunctional gold nanoshells to overcome trastuzumab resistance in HER2-overexpressing breast cancer

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13046-019-1305-x

Keywords

Functionalized gold nanoparticles; HER2-overexpressing breast cancer; Trastuzumab resistance; Resistance reversion; Photothermal therapy; Femtosecond laser

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Funding

  1. Labex LaSIPS [ANR-10-LABX0040-LaSIPS]
  2. French National Research Agency under the Investissements d'avenir program [ANR-11-IDEX-0003-02]
  3. Plan Cancer managed by the French ITMO Cancer [17CP077-00]
  4. Institut d'Alembert in Ecole Normale Superieure Paris-Saclay [FR CNRS 3242]

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BackgroundHER2-overexpressing metastatic breast cancers are challenging practice in oncology when they become resistant to anti-HER2 therapies such as trastuzumab. In these clinical situations, HER2-overexpression persists in metastatic localizations, and can thus be used for active targeting using innovative therapeutic approaches. Functionalized gold nanoparticles with anti-HER2 antibody can be stimulated by near-infrared light to induce hyperthermia.MethodsHere, hybrid anti-HER2 gold nanoshells were engineered for photothermal therapy to overcome trastuzumab resistance in HER2-overexpressing breast cancer xenografts.ResultsWhen gold nanoshells were administered in HER2-tumor xenografts, no toxicity was observed. A detailed pharmacokinetic study showed a time-dependent accumulation of gold nanoshells within the tumors, significantly greater with functionalized gold nanoshells at 72h. This enabled us to optimize the treatment protocol and irradiate the mice when the anti-HER2 gold nanoshells had accumulated most in the tumors. After weekly injections of anti-HER2 gold nanoshells, and repeated irradiations with a femtosecond-pulsed laser over four weeks, tumor growth was significantly inhibited. Detailed tissue microscopic analyses showed that the tumor growth inhibition was due to an anti-angiogenic effect, coherent with a preferential distribution of the nanoshells in tumor microvessels. We also showed a direct tumor cell effect with apoptosis and inhibition of proliferation, coherent with an immune-mediated targeting of tumor cells by anti-HER2 nanoshells.ConclusionThis preclinical study thus supports the use of anti-HER2 gold nanoshells and photothermal therapy to overcome trastuzumab resistance in HER2-overexpressing breast cancer.

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