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Ultrasound‐Triggered Delivery of Anticancer Therapeutics from MRI‐Visible Multilayer Microcapsules
Author(s) -
Alford Aaron,
Rich Megan,
Kozlovskaya Veronika,
Chen Jun,
Sherwood Jennifer,
Bolding Mark,
Warram Jason,
Bao Yuping,
Kharlampieva Eugenia
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.125
0
ISSN - 2366-3987
DOI - 10.1002/adtp.201800051
Subject(s) - drug delivery , doxorubicin , magnetic resonance imaging , in vivo , targeted drug delivery , ultrasound , biomedical engineering , capsule , medicine , materials science , nanotechnology , radiology , chemotherapy , surgery , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , botany
Although imaging‐guided drug delivery represents a noninvasive alternative to both surgical resection and systemic methods, it has seen limited clinical use due to the potential toxicity and fast clearance of currently available imaging agents. Herein, we introduce theranostic biocompatible microcapsules as efficient contrast‐enhanced imaging agents that combine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with ultrasound‐triggered drug release for real‐time tracking and targeted delivery in vivo. The 3‐μm diameter capsules are assembled via layer‐by‐layer deposition of the natural polyphenol tannic acid and poly( N ‐vinylpyrrolidone) with 4 nm iron oxide nanoparticles incorporated in the capsule wall. The nanoparticle‐modified capsules exhibit excellent T 1 and T 2 MRI contrast in a clinical 3T MRI scanner. Loaded with the anticancer drug doxorubicin, these capsules circulate in the blood stream for at least 48 h, which is a remarkable improvement compared to nonencapsulated nanoparticles. The application of focused ultrasound results in targeted drug release with a 16‐fold increase in doxorubicin localization in tumors compared to off‐target organs in a mouse model of breast cancer. Owing to the active contrast, long circulation, customizable size, shape, composition, and precise delivery of high payload concentrations, these materials present a powerful and safe platform for imaging‐guided precision drug delivery.

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