Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Glioma selectivity of magnetically targeted nanoparticles: A role of abnormal tumor hydrodynamics

2007; Elsevier BV; Volume: 122; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jconrel.2007.05.030

ISSN

1873-4995

Autores

Beata Chertok, Allan E. David, Yongzhuo Huang, Victor C. Yang,

Tópico(s)

Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies

Resumo

Magnetic targeting is a promising strategy for achieving localized drug delivery. Application of this strategy to treat brain tumors, however, is complicated by their deep intracranial location, since magnetic field density cannot be focused at a distance from an externally applied magnet. This study intended to examine whether, with magnetic targeting, pathological alteration in brain tumor flow dynamics could be of value in discriminating the diseased site from healthy brain. To address this question, the capture of magnetic nanoparticles was first assessed in vitro using a simple flow system under theoretically estimated glioma and normal brain flow conditions. Secondly, accumulation of nanoparticles via magnetic targeting was evaluated in vivo using 9L-glioma bearing rats. In vitro results that predicted a 7.6-fold increase in nanoparticle capture at glioma- versus contralateral brain-relevant flow rates were relatively consistent with the 9.6-fold glioma selectivity of nanoparticle accumulation over the contralateral brain observed in vivo. Based on these finding, the in vitro ratio of nanoparticle capture can be viewed as a plausible indicator of in vivo glioma selectivity. Overall, it can be concluded that the decreased blood flow rate in glioma, reflecting tumor vascular abnormalities, is an important contributor to glioma-selective nanoparticle accumulation with magnetic targeting.

Referência(s)