4.7 Article

The Therapeutic Effect of Second Near-Infrared Absorbing Gold Nanorods on Metastatic Lymph Nodes via Lymphatic Delivery System

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13091359

Keywords

lymphatic route; gold nanorods; photothermal therapy; metastatic lymph node; near-infrared light

Funding

  1. South Africa / Japan Bilateral Research Program [97982]
  2. South Africa National Research Foundation (NRF) Nanotechnology Flagship Programme [97983]
  3. JSPS KAKENHI [26293425, 16K15816, 26242051, 24650286]
  4. Japan Student Service Organization (JASSO)
  5. NRF South Africa for equipment-related travel and training grants [98299]
  6. Competitive Program for Rated Researchers [106060, 129290]
  7. Freestanding Doctoral Scholarship [112867, 131237]
  8. University of Johannesburg, South Africa, research committee (URC)
  9. Faculty of Science research committee (FRC)
  10. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16K15816] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Photothermal therapy has been established as an effective non-invasive treatment for cancer metastatic lymph nodes, but the monitoring and reporting of treatment progress still need to be explored. In this study, pegylated gold nanorods were delivered via the lymphatic route and combined with laser irradiation, resulting in a time-dependent reduction in tumour activity and statistically significant treatment response even after conclusion. This non-invasive technique could offer more insights into tumour therapy dynamics through lymphatic administration in preclinical studies.
Photothermal therapy has been established recently as a non-invasive treatment protocol for cancer metastatic lymph nodes. Although this treatment approach shows efficient tumour ablation towards lymph node metastasis, the monitoring and reporting of treatment progress using the lymphatic delivery channel still need to be explored. Herein, we investigated the anti-tumour effect of pegylated gold nanorods with a high aspect ratio (PAuNRs) delivered via the lymphatic route in a mouse model. In this study, breast carcinoma (FM3A-Luc) cells were inoculated in the subiliac lymph node (SiLN) to induce metastasis in the proper axillary lymph node (PALN). The treatment was initiated by injecting the PAuNRs into the accessory axillary lymph node (AALN) after tumour metastasis was confirmed in the PALN followed by external NIR laser irradiation under a temperature-controlled cooling system. The anti-tumour impact of the treatment was evaluated using an in vivo bioluminescence imaging system (IVIS). The results showed a time-dependent reduction in tumour activity with significant treatment response. Tumour growth was inhibited in all mice treated with PAuNRs under laser irradiation; results were statistically significant (** p < 0.01) even after treatment was concluded on day 3. We believe that this non-invasive technique would provide more information on the dynamics of tumour therapy using the lymphatically administered route in preclinical studies.

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