On-Demand Drug Release from Dual-Targeting Small Nanoparticles Triggered by High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Enhanced Glioblastoma-Targeting Therapy.
Authors: Luo Z, Jin K, Pang Q, Shen S, Yan Z, Jiang T, Zhu X, Yu L, Pang Z, Jiang X
Glioblastoma is one of the most challenging and intractable tumors with the difficult treatment and poor prognosis. Unsatisfactory traditional systemic chemotherapies for glioblastoma are mainly attributed to the insufficient and nonspecific drug delivery into the brain tumors as well as the incomplete drug release at the tumor sites. Inspired by the facts that angiopep-2 peptide is an acknowledged dual-targeting moiety for brain tumor-targeting delivery and high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is an ideal trigger for drug release with an ultrahigh energy and millimeter-sized focus ability, in the present study, a novel HIFU-responsive angiopep-2-modified small poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) hybrid nanoparticle (NP) drug delivery system holding doxorubicin/perfluorooctyl bromide (ANP-D/P) was designed to increase the intratumoral drug accumulation, further trigger on-demand drug release at the glioblastoma sites, and enhance glioblastoma therapy. It was shown that the ANP-D/P was stable and had a small size of 41 nm. The angiopep-2 modification endowed the ANP-D/P with improved blood-brain barrier transportation and specific accumulation in glioblastoma tissues by 17 folds and 13.4 folds compared with unmodified NPs, respectively. Under HIFU irradiation, the ANP-D/P could release 47% of the drug within 2 min and induce the apoptosis of most tumor cells. HIFU-triggered instantaneous drug release at the glioblastoma sites eventually enabled the ANP-D/P to achieve the strongest antiglioblastoma efficacy with the longest median survival time (56 days) of glioblastoma-bearing mice and the minimum vestiges of tumor cells in the pathological slices among all groups. In conclusion, the HIFU-responsive ANP-D/P in this study provided a new way for glioblastoma therapy with a great potential for clinical applications.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery WITHOUT BBB opening
Study Objective
To develop and evaluate dual-targeting small nanoparticles whose drug release can be triggered on demand by high-intensity focused ultrasound to enhance glioblastoma-targeting therapy.
Animal model / Human subject
mouse, BALB/c nude, 6–8 weeks, female
Disease model
glioma
Targeted brain region(s)
Brain Tumor
Cargo name and characteristics
nanoparticle
Route of administration
intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
HIFU triggered on-demand drug release from dual-targeting nanoparticles, significantly inhibited glioma growth in mice.
Duration of biological effect
not reported
Safety-related matter
No significant systemic toxicity or brain tissue damage reported at the tested HIFU intensity.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
high-intensity focused ultrasound system
FUS Frequency
1.1 MHz
FUS Intensity
2 W/cm²
FUS Pressure
not reported
FUS Mode
not reported
Pulse duration
not reported
Duration of a single FUS session
30 s
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