4.8 Article

Osteotropic Radiolabeled Nanophotosensitizer for Imaging and Treating Multiple Myeloma

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 4255-4264

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b09618

Keywords

multiple myeloma; Zr-89; cancer; nanoparticles; Cerenkov radiation

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NCI) [U54 CA199092, R01 CA171651, P50 CA094056, P30 CA091842]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH Shared Instrumentation Grants) [S10 OD016237, S10 OD020129, S10 OD025264, S10 OD027042]
  3. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program [W81XWH-16-1-0286]
  4. Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Research Find [11-FY16-01]
  5. Siteman Investment Program
  6. National Institutes of Health (NIBIB) [R01 EB00811]

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Rapid liver and spleen opsonization of systemically administered nanoparticles (NPs) for in vivo applications remains the Achilles' heel of nanomedicine, allowing only a small fraction of the materials to reach the intended target tissue. Although focusing on diseases that reside in the natural disposal organs for nanoparticles is a viable option, it limits the plurality of lesions that could benefit from nanomedical interventions. Here we designed a theranostic nanoplatform consisting of reactive oxygen (ROS)-generating titanium dioxide (TiO2) NPs, coated with a tumor-targeting agent, transferrin (Tf), and radiolabeled with a radionuclide (Zr-89) for targeting bone marrow, imaging the distribution of the NPs, and stimulating ROS generation for cell killing. Radiolabeling of TiO2 NPs with Zr-89 afforded thermodynamically and kinetically stable chelate-free Zr-89-TiO2-Tf NPs without altering the NP morphology. Treatment of multiple myeloma (MM) cells, a disease of plasma cells originating in the bone marrow, with Zr-89-TiO2-Tf generated cytotoxic ROS to induce cancer cell killing via the apoptosis pathway. Positron emission tomography/X-ray computed tomography (PET/CT) imaging and tissue biodistribution studies revealed that in vivo administration of Zr-89-TiO2-Tf in mice leveraged the osteotropic effect of Zr-89 to selectively localize about 70% of the injected radioactivity in mouse bone tissue. A combination of small-animal PET/CT imaging of NP distribution and bioluminescence imaging of cancer progression showed that a single-dose Zr-89-TiO2-Tf treatment in a disseminated MM mouse model completely inhibited cancer growth at euthanasia of untreated mice and at least doubled the survival of treated mice. Treatment of the mice with cold Zr-TiO2-Tf, Zr-89-oxalate, or Zr-89-Tf had no therapeutic benefit compared to untreated controls. This study reveals an effective radionuclide sensitizing nanophototherapy paradigm for the treatment of MM and possibly other bone-associated malignancies.

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