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Ultrasound Improves the Delivery and Therapeutic Effect of Nanoparticle-Stabilized Microbubbles in Breast Cancer Xenografts

Abstract

Compared with conventional chemotherapy, encapsulation of drugs in nanoparticles can improve efficacy and reduce toxicity. However, delivery of nanoparticles is often insufficient and heterogeneous because of various biological barriers and uneven tumor perfusion. We investigated a unique multifunctional drug delivery system consisting of microbubbles stabilized by polymeric nanoparticles (NPMBs), enabling ultrasound-mediated drug delivery. The aim was to examine mechanisms of ultrasound-mediated delivery and to determine if increased tumor uptake had a therapeutic benefit. Cellular uptake and toxicity, circulation and biodistribution were characterized. After intravenous injection of NPMBs into mice, tumors were treated with ultrasound of various pressures and pulse lengths, and distribution of nanoparticles was imaged on tumor sections. No effects of low pressures were observed, whereas complete bubble destruction at higher pressures improved tumor uptake 2.3 times, without tissue damage. An enhanced therapeutic effect was illustrated in a promising proof-of-concept study, in which all tumors exhibited regression into complete remission.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Sofie Snipstad
  • Sigrid Berg
  • Ýrr Asbjørg Mørch
  • Astrid Bjørkøy
  • Einar Sulheim
  • Rune Hansen
  • Ingeborg Grimstad
  • Annemieke van Wamel
  • Astri Fjelde Maaland
  • Sverre Helge Torp
  • Ruth Catharina de Lange Davies

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Biotechnology and Nanomedicine
  • SINTEF Digital / Health Research
  • St. Olavs Hospital, Trondheim University Hospital
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2017

Published in

Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology

ISSN

0301-5629

Volume

43

Issue

11

Page(s)

2651 - 2669

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository