21 research outputs found

    Microbubbles bound to drug-eluting beads enable ultrasound imaging and enhanced delivery of therapeutics

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    Transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) is an image-guided minimally invasive treatment for liver cancer which involves delivery of chemotherapy and embolic material into tumor-supplying arteries to block blood flow to a liver tumor and to deliver chemotherapy directly to the tumor. However, the released drug diffuses only less than a millimeter away from the beads. To enhance the efficacy of TACE, the development of microbubbles electrostatically bound to the surface of drug-eluting beads loaded with different amounts of doxorubicin (0–37.5 mg of Dox/mL of beads) is reported. Up to 400 microbubbles were bound to Dox-loaded beads (70–150 microns). This facilitated ultrasound imaging of the beads and increased the release rate of Dox upon exposure to high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU). Furthermore, ultrasound exposure (1 MPa peak negative pressure) increased the distance at which Dox could be detected from beads embedded in a tissue-mimicking phantom, compared with a no ultrasound control

    Ultrasound and x-ray imageable poloxamer-based hydrogel for loco-regional therapy delivery in the liver

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    Intratumoral injections have the potential for enhanced cancer treatment efficacy while reducing costs and systemic exposure. However, intratumoral drug injections can result in substantial off-target leakage and are invisible under standard imaging modalities like ultrasound (US) and x-ray. A thermosensitive poloxamer-based gel for drug delivery was developed that is visible using x-ray imaging (computed tomography (CT), cone beam CT, fluoroscopy), as well as using US by means of integrating perfluorobutane-filled microbubbles (MBs). MBs content was optimized using tissue mimicking phantoms and ex vivo bovine livers. Gel formulations less than 1% MBs provided gel depositions that were clearly identifiable on US and distinguishable from tissue background and with minimal acoustic artifacts. The cross-sectional areas of gel depositions obtained with US and CT imaging were similar in studies using ex vivo bovine liver and postmortem in situ swine liver. The gel formulation enhanced multimodal image-guided navigation, enabling fusion of ultrasound and x-ray/CT imaging, which may enhance targeting, definition of spatial delivery, and overlap of tumor and gel. Although speculative, such a paradigm for intratumoral drug delivery might streamline clinical workflows, reduce radiation exposure by reliance on US, and boost the precision and accuracy of drug delivery targeting during procedures. Imageable gels may also provide enhanced temporal and spatial control of intratumoral conformal drug delivery

    Liver-specific 3D sectioning molds for correlating in vivo CT and MRI with tumor histopathology in woodchucks (Marmota monax).

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    PurposeTo evaluate the spatial registration and correlation of liver and tumor histopathology sections with corresponding in vivo CT and MRI using 3D, liver-specific cutting molds in a woodchuck (Marmota monax) hepatic tumor model.MethodsFive woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus following inoculation at birth and with confirmed hepatic tumors were imaged by contrast enhanced CT or MRI. Virtual 3D liver or tumor models were generated by segmentation of in vivo CT or MR imaging. A specimen-specific cavity was created inside a block containing cutting slots aligned with an imaging plane using computer-aided design software, and the final cutting molds were fabricated using a 3D printer. Livers were resected two days after initial imaging, fixed with formalin or left unfixed, inserted into the 3D molds, and cut into parallel pieces by passing a sharp blade through the parallel slots in the mold. Histopathology sections were acquired and their spatial overlap with in vivo image slices was quantified using the Dice similarity coefficient (DSC).ResultsImaging of the woodchucks revealed heterogeneous hepatic tumors of varying size, number, and location. Specimen-specific 3D molds provided accurate co-localization of histopathology of whole livers, liver lobes, and pedunculated tumors with in vivo CT and MR imaging, with or without tissue fixation. Visual inspection of histopathology sections and corresponding in vivo image slices revealed spatial registration of analogous pathologic features. The mean DSC for all specimens was 0.83+/-0.05.ConclusionUse of specimen-specific 3D molds for en bloc liver dissection provided strong spatial overlap and feature correspondence between in vivo image slices and histopathology sections

    Prelesional arterial endothelial phenotypes in hypercholesterolemia: universal ABCA1 upregulation contrasts with region-specific gene expression in vivo

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    Atherosclerosis originates as focal arterial lesions having a predictable distribution to regions of bifurcations, branches, and inner curvatures where blood flow characteristics are complex. Distinct endothelial phenotypes correlate with regional hemodynamics. We propose that systemic risk factors modify regional endothelial phenotype to influence focal susceptibility to atherosclerosis. Transcript profiles of freshly isolated endothelial cells from three atherosusceptible and three atheroprotected arterial regions in adult swine were analyzed to determine the initial prelesional effects of hypercholesterolemia on endothelial phenotypes in vivo. Cholesterol efflux transporter ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) was upregulated at all sites in response to short-term high-fat diet. Proinflammatory and antioxidative endothelial gene expression profiles were induced in atherosusceptible and atheroprotected regions, respectively. However, markers for endoplasmic reticulum stress, a signature of susceptible endothelial phenotype, were not further enhanced by brief hypercholesterolemia. Both region-specific and ubiquitous (ABCA1) phenotype changes were identified as early prelesional responses of the endothelium to hypercholesterolemia

    X-ray imageable, drug-loaded hydrogel that forms at body temperature for image-guided, needle-based locoregional drug delivery

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    Abstract Liver cancer ranks as the fifth leading cause of cancer-related death globally. Direct intratumoral injections of anti-cancer therapeutics may improve therapeutic efficacy and mitigate adverse effects compared to intravenous injections. Some challenges of intratumoral injections are that the liquid drug formulation may not remain localized and have unpredictable volumetric distribution. Thus, drug delivery varies widely, highly-dependent upon technique. An X-ray imageable poloxamer 407 (POL)-based drug delivery gel was developed and characterized, enabling real-time feedback. Utilizing three needle devices, POL or a control iodinated contrast solution were injected into an ex vivo bovine liver. The 3D distribution was assessed with cone beam computed tomography (CBCT). The 3D distribution of POL gels demonstrated localized spherical morphologies regardless of the injection rate. In addition, the gel 3D conformal distribution could be intentionally altered, depending on the injection technique. When doxorubicin (DOX) was loaded into the POL and injected, DOX distribution on optical imaging matched iodine distribution on CBCT suggesting spatial alignment of DOX and iodine localization in tissue. The controllability and localized deposition of this formulation may ultimately reduce the dependence on operator technique, reduce systemic side effects, and facilitate reproducibility across treatments, through more predictable standardized delivery
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