4.8 Article

Local Intratracheal Delivery of Perfluorocarbon Nanoparticles to Lung Cancer Demonstrated with Magnetic Resonance Multimodal Imaging

Journal

THERANOSTICS
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 563-574

Publisher

IVYSPRING INT PUBL
DOI: 10.7150/thno.21466

Keywords

perfluorocarbon nanoparticle; MRI; drug delivery; lung cancer; intratracheal delivery

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China [2015CB931800]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81627901, 31210103913, 81771903]
  3. Key Laboratory of Molecular Imaging Foundation (College of Heilongjiang Province)
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province of China [LC2016034, LC2013C26]
  5. Youth Science WU LIANDE Foundation of Harbin Medical University [WLD-QN1404, WLD-QN1119]
  6. Heilongjiang Postdoctoral Funds for Scientific Research Initiation [LBH-Q15090]
  7. Fourth Hospital of Harbin Medical University Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [HYDSYJQ201601]
  8. [CA154737]
  9. [CA199092]
  10. [HL122471]
  11. [HL112518]
  12. [HL113392]
  13. [HHSN26820140042C]
  14. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R01CA154737, U54CA199092, R01CA216840] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  15. NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE [R01HL113392, R42HL112518, R01HL122471] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Eighty percent of lung cancers originate as subtle premalignant changes in the airway mucosal epithelial layer of bronchi and alveoli, which evolve and penetrate deeper into the parenchyma. Liquid-ventilation, with perfluorocarbons (PFC) was first demonstrated in rodents in 1966 then subsequently applied as lipid-encapsulated PFC emulsions to improve pulmonary function in neonatal infants suffering with respiratory distress syndrome in 1996. Subsequently, PFC nanoparticles (NP) were extensively studied as intravenous (IV) vascular-constrained nanotechnologies for diagnostic imaging and targeted drug delivery applications. Methods: This proof-of-concept study compared intratumoral localization of fluorescent paramagnetic (M) PFC NP in the Vx2 rabbit model using proton (H-1) and fluorine (F-19) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (3T) following intratracheal (IT) or IV administration. MRI results were corroborated by fluorescence microscopy. Results: Dynamic H-1-MR and F-19-MR images (3T) obtained over 72 h demonstrated marked and progressive accumulation of M-PFC NP within primary lung Vx2 tumors during the first 12 h post IT administration. Marked H-1 and F-19 MR signal persisted for over 72 h. In contradistinction, IV M-PFC NP produced a modest transient signal during the initial 2 h post-injection that was consistent circumferential blood pool tumor enhancement. Fluorescence microscopy of excised tumors corroborated the MR results and revealed enormous intratumor NP deposition on day 3 after IT but not IV treatment. Rhodamine-phospholipid incorporated into the PFC nanoparticle surfactant was distributed widely within the tumor on day 3, which is consistent with a hemifusion-based contact drug delivery mechanism previously reported. Fluorescence microscopy also revealed similar high concentrations of M-PFC NP given IT for metastatic Vx2 lung tumors. Biodistribution studies in mice revealed that M-PFC NP given IV distributed into the reticuloendothelial organs, whereas, the same dosage given IT was basically not detected beyond the lung itself. PFC NP given IT did not impact rabbit behavior or impair respiratory function. PFC NP effects on cells in culture were negligible and when given IV or IT no changes in rabbit hematology nor serum clinical chemistry parameters were measured. Conclusion: IT delivery of PFC NP offered unique opportunity to locally deliver PFC NP in high concentrations into lung cancers with minimal extratumor systemic exposure.

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