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1.
Chempluschem ; : e202400168, 2024 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38691830

RESUMEN

Recently, we suggested liquid and high-boiling TIPS-CΞC-SF5 (TASP) as a versatile reagent to access so far elusive SF5-containing building blocks by less specialized laboratories under bench-top conditions. The synthesis of non-aromatic SF5 building blocks generally required on-site fluorination or pentafluorosulfanylation steps employing toxic and/or gaseous reagents. Herein, we underline the versatility of this reagent by reporting a benign bench-top protocol for the synthesis of Z-configured ß-pentafluorosulfanylated vinyl sulfides in good to excellent yields (up to 99%) with exclusive (Z)-diasteroselectivity and broad functional group tolerance. This method exploits an in-situ protodesilylation-hydrothiolation sequence. This so far uncharted class of compounds was characterized by means of NMR-spectroscopy as well as SC-XRD. Furthermore, we suggest the reaction to proceed via a kinetically controlled closed-shell reaction pathway, corroborated by in-silico experiments.

2.
Med Phys ; 51(5): 3195-3206, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38513254

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Percutaneous microwave ablation (pMWA) is a minimally invasive procedure that uses a microwave antenna placed at the tip of a needle to induce lethal tissue heating. It can treat cancer and other diseases with lower morbidity than conventional surgery, but one major limitation is the lack of control over the heating region around the ablation needle. Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles have the potential to enhance and control pMWA heating due to their ability to absorb microwave energy and their ease of local delivery. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to experimentally quantify the capabilities of FDA-approved superparamagnetic iron oxide Feraheme nanoparticles (FHNPs) to enhance and control pMWA heating. This study aims to determine the effectiveness of locally injected FHNPs in increasing the maximum temperature during pMWA and to investigate the ability of FHNPs to create a controlled ablation zone around the pMWA needle. METHODS: PMWA was performed using a clinical ablation system at 915 MHz in ex-vivo porcine liver tissues. Prior to ablation, 50 uL 5 mg/mL FHNP injections were made on one side of the pMWA needle via a 23-gauge needle. Local temperatures at the FHNP injection site were directly compared to equidistant control sites without FHNP. First, temperatures were compared using directly inserted thermocouples. Next, temperatures were measured non-invasively using magnetic resonance thermometry (MRT), which enabled comprehensive four-dimensional (volumetric and temporal) assessment of heating effects relative to nanoparticle distribution, which was quantified using dual-echo ultrashort echo time (UTE) subtraction MR imaging. Maximum heating within FHNP-exposed tissues versus control tissues were compared at multiple pMWA energy delivery settings. The ability to generate a controlled asymmetric ablation zone using multiple FHNP injections was also tested. Finally, intra-procedural MRT-derived heat maps were correlated with gold standard gross pathology using Dice similarity analysis. RESULTS: Maximum temperatures at the FHNP injection site were significantly higher than control (without FHNP) sites when measured using direct thermocouples (93.1 ± 6.0°C vs. 57.2 ± 8.1°C, p = 0.002) and using non-invasive MRT (115.6 ± 13.4°C vs. 49.0 ± 10.6°C, p = 0.02). Temperature difference between FHNP-exposed and control sites correlated with total energy deposition: 66.6 ± 17.6°C, 58.1 ± 8.5°C, and 20.8 ± 9.2°C at high (17.5 ± 2.2 kJ), medium (13.6 ± 1.8 kJ), and low (8.8 ± 1.1 kJ) energies, respectively (all pairwise p < 0.05). Each FHNP injection resulted in a nanoparticle distribution within 0.9 ± 0.2 cm radially of the injection site and a local lethal heating zone confined to within 1.1 ± 0.4 cm radially of the injection epicenter. Multiple injections enabled a controllable, asymmetric ablation zone to be generated around the ablation needle, with maximal ablation radius on the FHNP injection side of 1.6 ± 0.2 cm compared to 0.7 ± 0.2 cm on the non-FHNP side (p = 0.02). MRT intra-procedural predicted ablation zone correlated strongly with post procedure gold-standard gross pathology assessment (Dice similarity 0.9). CONCLUSIONS: Locally injected FHNPs significantly enhanced pMWA heating in liver tissues, and were able to control the ablation zone shape around a pMWA needle. MRI and MRT allowed volumetric real-time visualization of both FHNP distribution and FHNP-enhanced pMWA heating that was useful for intra-procedural monitoring. This work strongly supports further development of a FHNP-enhanced pMWA paradigm; as all individual components of this approach are approved for patient use, there is low barrier for clinical translation.


Asunto(s)
Técnicas de Ablación , Nanopartículas Magnéticas de Óxido de Hierro , Microondas , Termometría , Animales , Termometría/métodos , Técnicas de Ablación/métodos , Porcinos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Temperatura , Hígado/cirugía , Hígado/diagnóstico por imagen
3.
Sci Transl Med ; 15(712): eadi0069, 2023 09 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37672566

RESUMEN

The lack of reliable predictive biomarkers to guide effective therapy is a major obstacle to the advancement of therapy for high-grade gliomas, particularly glioblastoma (GBM), one of the few cancers whose prognosis has not improved over the past several decades. With this pilot clinical trial (number NCT04135807), we provide first-in-human evidence that drug-releasing intratumoral microdevices (IMDs) can be safely and effectively used to obtain patient-specific, high-throughput molecular and histopathological drug response profiling. These data can complement other strategies to inform the selection of drugs based on their observed antitumor effect in situ. IMDs are integrated into surgical practice during tumor resection and remain in situ only for the duration of the otherwise standard operation (2 to 3 hours). None of the six enrolled patients experienced adverse events related to the IMD, and the exposed tissue was usable for downstream analysis for 11 out of 12 retrieved specimens. Analysis of the specimens provided preliminary evidence of the robustness of the readout, compatibility with a wide array of techniques for molecular tissue interrogation, and promising similarities with the available observed clinical-radiological responses to temozolomide. From an investigational aspect, the amount of information obtained with IMDs allows characterization of tissue effects of any drugs of interest, within the physiological context of the intact tumor, and without affecting the standard surgical workflow.


Asunto(s)
Glioblastoma , Glioma , Humanos , Glioma/tratamiento farmacológico , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos , Liberación de Fármacos , Temozolomida/uso terapéutico
4.
Cells ; 12(2)2023 01 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36672243

RESUMEN

Immunotherapies, including anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint blocking (ICB) antibodies, have revolutionized the treatment of many solid malignancies. However, their efficacy in breast cancer has been limited to a subset of patients with triple-negative breast cancer, where ICBs are routinely combined with a range of cytotoxic and targeted agents. Reliable biomarkers predictive of the therapeutic response to ICB in breast cancer are critically missing, though a combination response has been associated with immunogenic cell death (ICD). Here, we utilized a recently developed integrated analytical platform, the multiplex implantable microdevice assay (MIMA), to evaluate the presence and spatial cell relations of literature-based candidate markers predictive of ICB efficacy in luminal mouse mammary carcinoma. MIMA integrates (i) an implantable microdevice for the localized delivery of small amounts of drugs inside the tumor bed with (ii) sequential multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC) and spatial cell analysis pipelines to rapidly (within days) describe drug mechanisms of action and find predictive biomarkers in complex tumor tissue. We show that the expression of cleaved caspase-3, ICAM-1, neuropilin-1, myeloperoxidase, calreticulin, galectin-3, and PD-L1 were spatially associated with the efficacy of panobinostat, a pan-HDAC inhibitor that was previously shown to induce immunogenic cell death and synergize with anti-PD-1 in breast cancer. PD-L1 by itself, however, was not a reliable predictor. Instead, ICB efficacy was robustly identified through the in situ hotspot detection of galectin-3-positive non-proliferating tumor zones enriched in cell death and infiltrated by anti-tumor cytotoxic neutrophils positive for ICAM-1 and neuropilin-1. Such hotspots can be specifically detected using distance-based cluster analyses. Single-cell measurements of the functional states in the tumor microenvironment suggest that both qualitative and quantitative effects might drive effective therapy responses. Overall, the presented study provides (i) complementary biological knowledge about the earliest cell events of induced anti-tumor immunity in breast cancer, including the emergence of resistant cancer stem cells, and (ii) newly identified biomarkers in form of specific spatial cell associations. The approach used standard cell-type-, IHC-, and FFPE-based techniques, and therefore the identified spatial clustering of in situ biomarkers can be readily integrated into existing clinical or research workflows, including in luminal breast cancer. Since early drug responses were detected, the biomarkers could be especially applicable to window-of-opportunity clinical trials to rapidly discriminate between responding and resistant patients, thus limiting unnecessary treatment-associated toxicities.


Asunto(s)
Antineoplásicos , Carcinoma , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas , Humanos , Animales , Ratones , Panobinostat , Antígeno B7-H1/metabolismo , Molécula 1 de Adhesión Intercelular , Galectina 3 , Neuropilina-1 , Biomarcadores de Tumor/análisis , Antineoplásicos/farmacología , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas/patología , Carcinoma/tratamiento farmacológico , Microambiente Tumoral
5.
Adv Healthc Mater ; 12(2): e2201585, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36213946

RESUMEN

One of the major shortcomings of nano carriers-assisted cancer therapeutic strategies continues to be the inadequate tumor penetration and retention of systemically administered nanoformulations and its off-target toxicity. Stromal parameters-related heterogeneity in enhanced permeability and retention effect and physicochemical properties of the nanoformulations immensely contributes to their poor tumor extravasation. Herein, a novel tumor targeting strategy, where an intratumorally implanted micromagnet can significantly enhance accumulation of magneto-plasmonic nanoparticles (NPs) at the micromagnet-implanted tumor in bilateral colorectal tumor models while limiting their off-target accumulation, is demonstrated. To this end, novel multimodal gold/iron oxide NPs comprised of an array of multifunctional moieties with high therapeutic, sensing, and imaging potential are developed. It is also discovered that cancer cell targeted NPs in combination with static magnetic field can selectively induce cancer cell death. A multimodal caspase-3 nanosensor is also developed for real-time visualization of selective induction of apoptosis in cancer cells. In addition, the photothermal killing capability of these NPs in vitro is evaluated, and their potential for enhanced photothermal ablation in tissue samples is demonstrated. Building on current uses of implantable devices for therapeutic purposes, this study envisions the proposed micromagnet-assisted NPs delivery approach may be used to accelerate the clinical translation of various nanoformulations.


Asunto(s)
Nanopartículas del Metal , Neoplasias , Línea Celular Tumoral , Nanopartículas/química , Neoplasias/diagnóstico por imagen , Apoptosis , Terapia Fototérmica/métodos , Nanopartículas del Metal/química , Oro/química
6.
Cancer Res ; 83(2): 219-238, 2023 01 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36413141

RESUMEN

Abiraterone is a standard treatment for metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) that slows disease progression by abrogating androgen synthesis and antagonizing the androgen receptor (AR). Here we report that inhibitors of the mitotic regulator polo-like kinase-1 (Plk1), including the clinically active third-generation Plk1 inhibitor onvansertib, synergizes with abiraterone in vitro and in vivo to kill a subset of cancer cells from a wide variety of tumor types in an androgen-independent manner. Gene-expression analysis identified an AR-independent synergy-specific gene set signature upregulated upon abiraterone treatment that is dominated by pathways related to mitosis and the mitotic spindle. Abiraterone treatment alone caused defects in mitotic spindle orientation, failure of complete chromosome condensation, and improper cell division independently of its effects on AR signaling. These effects, although mild following abiraterone monotherapy, resulted in profound sensitization to the antimitotic effects of Plk1 inhibition, leading to spindle assembly checkpoint-dependent mitotic cancer cell death and entosis. In a murine patient-derived xenograft model of abiraterone-resistant metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), combined onvansertib and abiraterone resulted in enhanced mitotic arrest and dramatic inhibition of tumor cell growth compared with either agent alone. Overall, this work establishes a mechanistic basis for the phase II clinical trial (NCT03414034) testing combined onvansertib and abiraterone in mCRPC patients and indicates this combination may have broad utility for cancer treatment. SIGNIFICANCE: Abiraterone treatment induces mitotic defects that sensitize cancer cells to Plk1 inhibition, revealing an AR-independent mechanism for this synergistic combination that is applicable to a variety of cancer types.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Próstata Resistentes a la Castración , Receptores Androgénicos , Masculino , Humanos , Animales , Ratones , Receptores Androgénicos/metabolismo , Neoplasias de la Próstata Resistentes a la Castración/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias de la Próstata Resistentes a la Castración/genética , Neoplasias de la Próstata Resistentes a la Castración/metabolismo , Andrógenos , Mitosis
7.
Ann Surg ; 277(5): e1143-e1149, 2023 05 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35129472

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the safety and feasibility of implantation and retrieval of a novel implantable microdevice (IMD) in NSCLC patients undergoing operative resection. BACKGROUND: Adjuvant therapy has limited impact on postsurgical outcomes in NSCLC due to the inability to predict optimal treatment regimens. METHODS: An IMD measuring 6.5 mm by 0.7 mm, containing micro-reservoirs allowing for high-throughput localized drug delivery, was developed and loaded with 12 chemotherapeutic agents. Five patients with peripheral lung lesions larger than 1.0 cm were enrolled in this phase 1 clinical study. IMDs were inserted into tumors intraoperatively under direct vision, removed with the resected specimen, and retrieved in pathology. Surrounding tissues were sectioned, stained, and analyzed for tissue drug response to the IMD-delivered microdoses of these agents by a variety of pharmacodynamic markers. RESULTS: A total of 14 IMDs were implanted intraoperatively with 13 (93%) successfully retrieved. After technique refinement, IMDs were reliably inserted and retrieved in open, Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery, and robotic cases. No severe adverse reactions were observed. The one retained IMD has remained in place without movement or any adverse effects. Analysis of patient blood revealed no detection of chemotherapeutic agents. We observed differential sensitivities of patient tumors to the drugs on the IMD. CONCLUSIONS: A multi-drug IMD can be safely inserted and retrieved into lung tumors during a variety of surgical approaches. Future studies will encompass preoperative placement to better examine specific tumor responsiveness to therapeutic agents, allowing clinicians to tailor treatment regimens to the microenvironment of each patient.


Asunto(s)
Carcinoma de Pulmón de Células no Pequeñas , Neoplasias Pulmonares , Humanos , Carcinoma de Pulmón de Células no Pequeñas/tratamiento farmacológico , Carcinoma de Pulmón de Células no Pequeñas/cirugía , Carcinoma de Pulmón de Células no Pequeñas/patología , Neoplasias Pulmonares/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias Pulmonares/cirugía , Neoplasias Pulmonares/patología , Predicción , Cirugía Torácica Asistida por Video , Microambiente Tumoral
8.
Opt Express ; 30(20): 36651-36664, 2022 Sep 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36258589

RESUMEN

Graded index (GRIN) lens endoscopy has broadly benefited biomedical microscopic imaging by enabling accessibility to sites not reachable by traditional benchtop microscopes. It is a long-held notion that GRIN lenses can only be used as rigid probes, which may limit their potential for certain applications. Here, we describe bendable and long-range GRIN microimaging probes for a variety of potential micro-endoscopic biomedical applications. Using a two-photon fluorescence imaging system, we have experimentally demonstrated the feasibility of three-dimensional imaging through a 500-µm-diameter and ∼11 cm long GRIN lens subject to a cantilever beam-like deflection with a minimum bend radius of ∼25 cm. Bend-induced perturbation to the field of view and resolution has also been investigated quantitatively. Our development alters the conventional notion of GRIN lenses and enables a range of innovative applications. For example, the demonstrated flexibility is highly desirable for implementation into current and emerging minimally invasive clinical procedures, including a pioneering microdevice for high-throughput cancer drug selection.


Asunto(s)
Cristalino , Lentes , Cristalino/diagnóstico por imagen , Fotones , Endoscopía/métodos , Imagenología Tridimensional
9.
Nat Biotechnol ; 40(12): 1823-1833, 2022 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35788566

RESUMEN

Systematically identifying synergistic combinations of targeted agents and immunotherapies for cancer treatments remains difficult. In this study, we integrated high-throughput and high-content techniques-an implantable microdevice to administer multiple drugs into different sites in tumors at nanodoses and multiplexed imaging of tumor microenvironmental states-to investigate the tumor cell and immunological response signatures to different treatment regimens. Using a mouse model of breast cancer, we identified effective combinations from among numerous agents within days. In vivo studies in three immunocompetent mammary carcinoma models demonstrated that the predicted combinations synergistically increased therapeutic efficacy. We identified at least five promising treatment strategies, of which the panobinostat, venetoclax and anti-CD40 triple therapy was the most effective in inducing complete tumor remission across models. Successful drug combinations increased spatial association of cancer stem cells with dendritic cells during immunogenic cell death, suggesting this as an important mechanism of action in long-term breast cancer control.


Asunto(s)
Antineoplásicos , Neoplasias , Humanos , Inmunoterapia , Panobinostat , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos , Línea Celular Tumoral
10.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol ; 10: 855755, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35372313

RESUMEN

A main impediment to effective development of new therapeutics for central nervous system disorders, and for the in vivo testing of biological hypotheses in the brain, is the ability to rapidly measure the effect of novel agents and treatment combinations on the pathophysiology of native brain tissue. We have developed a miniaturized implantable microdevice (IMD) platform, optimized for direct stereotactic insertion into the brain, which enables the simultaneous measurement of multiple drug effects on the native brain tissue in situ. The IMD contains individual reservoirs which release microdoses of single agents or combinations into confined regions of the brain, with subsequent spatial analysis of phenotypic, transcriptomic or metabolomic effects. Using murine models of Alzheimer's disease (AD), we demonstrate that microdoses of various approved and investigational CNS drugs released from the IMD within a local brain region exhibit in situ phenotypes indicative of therapeutic responses, such as neuroprotection, reduction of hyperphosphorylation, immune cell modulation, and anti-inflammatory effects. We also show that local treatments with drugs affecting metabolism provide evidence for regulation of metabolite profiles and immune cell function in hMAPT AD mice. The platform should prove useful in facilitating the rapid testing of pharmacological or biological treatment hypotheses directly within native brain tissues (of various animal models and in patients) and help to confirm on-target effects, in situ pharmacodynamics and drug-induced microenvironment remodeling, much more efficiently than currently feasible.

11.
Transl Oncol ; 21: 101427, 2022 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35472731

RESUMEN

Long-term treatment outcomes for patients with high grade ovarian cancers have not changed despite innovations in therapies. There is no recommended assay for predicting patient response to second-line therapy, thus clinicians must make treatment decisions based on each individual patient. Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) tumors have been shown to predict drug sensitivity in ovarian cancer patients, but the time frame for intraperitoneal (IP) tumor generation, expansion, and drug screening is beyond that for tumor recurrence and platinum resistance to occur, thus results do not have clinical utility. We describe a drug sensitivity screening assay using a drug delivery microdevice implanted for 24 h in subcutaneous (SQ) ovarian PDX tumors to predict treatment outcomes in matched IP PDX tumors in a clinically relevant time frame. The SQ tumor response to local microdose drug exposure was found to be predictive of the growth of matched IP tumors after multi-week systemic therapy using significantly fewer animals (10 SQ vs 206 IP). Multiplexed immunofluorescence image analysis of phenotypic tumor response combined with a machine learning classifier could predict IP treatment outcomes against three second-line cytotoxic therapies with an average AUC of 0.91.

12.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 69(1): 412-421, 2022 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34242160

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this article is to report the translational process of an implantable microdevice platform with an emphasis on the technical and engineering adaptations for patient use, regulatory advances, and successful integration into clinical workflow. METHODS: We developed design adaptations for implantation and retrieval, established ongoing monitoring and testing, and facilitated regulatory advances that enabled the administration and examination of a large set of cancer therapies simultaneously in individual patients. RESULTS: Six applications for oncology studies have successfully proceeded to patient trials, with future applications in progress. CONCLUSION: First-in-human translation required engineering design changes to enable implantation and retrieval that fit with existing clinical workflows, a regulatory strategy that enabled both delivery and response measurement of up to 20 agents in a single patient, and establishment of novel testing and quality control processes for a drug/device combination product without clear precedents. SIGNIFICANCE: This manuscript provides a real-world account and roadmap on how to advance from animal proof-of-concept into the clinic, confronting the question of how to use research to benefit patients.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas , Animales , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos , Humanos , Neoplasias/tratamiento farmacológico , Prótesis e Implantes , Flujo de Trabajo
13.
Front Cell Dev Biol ; 10: 1032360, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36619865

RESUMEN

Tumor-infiltrating immune cells experience significant metabolic reprogramming in the tumor microenvironment (TME), and they share similar metabolic pathways and nutrient needs with malignant cells. This positions these cell types in direct nutrient competition in the TME. We currently lack a complete understanding of the similarities, differences, and functional consequences of the metabolic pathways utilized by activated immune cells from different lineages versus neoplastic cells. This study applies a novel in situ approach using implantable microdevices to expose the tumor to 27 controlled and localized metabolic perturbations in order to perform a systematic investigation into the metabolic regulation of the cellular fitness and persistence between immune and tumor cells directly within the native TME. Our findings identify the most potent metabolites, notably glutamine and arginine, that induce a favorable metabolic immune response in a mammary carcinoma model, and reveal novel insights on less characterized pathways, such as cysteine and glutathione. We then examine clinical samples from cancer patients to confirm the elevation of these pathways in tumor regions that are enriched in activated T cells. Overall, this work provides the first instance of a highly multiplexed in situ competition assay between malignant and immune cells within tumors using a range of localized microdose metabolic perturbations. The approach and findings may be used to potentiate the effects of T cell stimulating immunotherapies on a tumor-specific or personalized basis through targeted enrichment or depletion of specific metabolites.

14.
J Pathol Inform ; 12: 34, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34760331

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Tumor heterogeneity is increasingly being recognized as a major source of variability in the histopathological assessment of drug responses. Quantitative analysis of immunohistochemistry (IHC) and immunofluorescence (IF) images using biomarkers that capture spatialpatterns of distinct tumor biology and drug concentration in tumors is of high interest to the field. METHODS: We have developed an image analysis pipeline to measure drug response using IF and IHC images along spatial gradients of local drug release from a tumor-implantable drug delivery microdevice. The pipeline utilizes a series of user-interactive python scripts and CellProfiler pipelines with custom modules to perform image and spatial analysis of regions of interest within whole-slide images. RESULTS: Worked examples demonstrate that intratumor measurements such as apoptosis, cell proliferation, and immune cell population density can be quantitated in a spatially and drug concentration-dependent manner, establishing in vivo profiles of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics in tumors. CONCLUSIONS: Spatial image analysis of tumor response along gradients of local drug release is achievable in high throughput. The major advantage of this approach is the use of spatially aware annotation tools to correlate drug gradients with drug effects in tumors in vivo.

15.
Int J Mol Sci ; 22(21)2021 Oct 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34769180

RESUMEN

Advances in the intratumor measurement of drug responses have included a pioneering biomedical microdevice for high throughput drug screening in vivo, which was further advanced by integrating a graded-index lens based two-dimensional fluorescence micro-endoscope to monitor tissue responses in situ across time. While the previous system provided a bulk measurement of both drug delivery and tissue response from a given region of the tumor, it was incapable of visualizing drug distribution and tissue responses in a three-dimensional (3D) way, thus missing the critical relationship between drug concentration and effect. Here we demonstrate a next-generation system that couples multiplexed intratumor drug release with continuous 3D spatial imaging of the tumor microenvironment via the integration of a miniaturized two-photon micro-endoscope. This enables optical sectioning within the live tissue microenvironment to effectively profile the entire tumor region adjacent to the microdevice across time. Using this novel microimaging-microdevice (MI-MD) system, we successfully demonstrated the four-dimensional imaging (3 spatial dimensions plus time) of local drug delivery in tissue phantom and tumors. Future studies include the use of the MI-MD system for monitoring of localized intra-tissue drug release and concurrent measurement of tissue responses in live organisms, with applications to study drug resistance due to nonuniform drug distribution in tumors, or immune cell responses to anti-cancer agents.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/instrumentación , Neoplasias Experimentales/diagnóstico por imagen , Imagen Óptica/instrumentación , Animales , Línea Celular Tumoral , Pollos , Ratones , Fantasmas de Imagen
16.
MethodsX ; 8: 101382, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34430278

RESUMEN

Implantable drug-delivery microdevices are a key diagnostic and therapeutic tool in medicine with increasing applications. Preparation of such combination drug-delivery devices for human studies requires the development of methods to ensure sterility, safety and integrity on both the device and drug side. Despite growing applications for these technologies, there has been a lack of clear methodology regarding sterilization and preparation to meet strict guidelines set forth by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Our laboratory developed a set of widely applicable and straightforward procedures to prepare drug-device combination products for clinical use that consistently achieve the high-quality standards provided by the FDA. This includes several newly developed methods for preparation of the implant including endotoxin removal, appropriate sterilization of raw materials, formulation of novel pharmaceutical agents, and loading of agents into drug delivery reservoirs. We also discuss protocols and methods developed with FDA to meet regulatory guidelines to ensure continual sterility and endotoxin testing, as well as longer-term stability testing of drugs and biologic agents.•Endotoxin removal and sterilization of raw materials for clinical use.•Formulation and device loading of novel pharmaceutical agents.•Continued testing of pharmaceutical agents and devices to meet regulatory guidelines.

17.
Materials (Basel) ; 14(12)2021 Jun 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34207445

RESUMEN

We analytically investigate the feasibility of long graded-index (GRIN)-lens-based microendoscopes through wavefront shaping. Following the very well-defined ray trajectories in a GRIN lens, mode-dependent phase delay is first determined. Then, the phase compensation needed for obtaining diffraction limited resolution is derived. Finally, the diffraction pattern of the lens output is computed using the Rayleigh-Sommerfeld diffraction theory. We show that diffraction-limited resolution is obtained for a 0.5 mm diameter lens with a length over 1 m. It is also demonstrated that different imaging working distances (WDs) can be realized by modifying the phase compensation. When a short design WD is used, a large imaging numerical aperture (NA) higher than 0.4 is achievable even when a low NA lens (NA = 0.1) is used. The long- and thin-GRIN-lens-based microendoscope investigated here, which is attractive for biomedical applications, is being prioritized for use in a clinical stage microdevice that measures three-dimensional drug responses inside the body. The advance described in this work may enable superior imaging capabilities in clinical applications in which long and flexible imaging probes are favored.

18.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 12(4)2021 Apr 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33917289

RESUMEN

Percutaneously implanted miniaturized devices such as fiducial markers, miniaturized sensors, and drug delivery devices have an important and expanding role in diagnosing and treating a variety of diseases. However, there is a need to develop and evaluate anchoring methods to ensure that these microdevices remain secure without dislodgement, as even minimal migration within tissues could result in loss of microdevice functionality or clinical complications. Here we describe two anchoring methods made from biocompatible materials: (1) a self-expanding nitinol mesh anchor and (2) self-expanding hydrogel particles contained within pliable netting. We integrate these anchors into existing drug-screening microdevices and experimentally measure forces required to dislodge them from varying tissues. We report similar dislodgement forces of 738 ± 37, 707 ± 40, 688 ± 29, and 520 ± 28 mN for nitinol-anchored microdevices, and 735 ± 98, 702 ± 46, 457 ± 47, and 459 ± 39 mN for hydrogel-anchored microdevices in liver, kidney, fat, and muscle tissues, respectively-significantly higher compared with 13 ± 2, 15 ± 3, 15 ± 2, and 15 ± 3 mN for non-anchored microdevices (p < 0.001 in all tissues). The anchoring methods increased resistance to dislodgement by a factor of 30-50× in all tissues, did not increase the required needle gauge for insertion, and were compatible with percutaneous implantation and removal. These results indicate that anchoring significantly improves microdevice stability and should reduce migration risk in a variety of biological tissues.

19.
Cancers (Basel) ; 13(4)2021 Feb 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33562152

RESUMEN

By observing the activity of anti-cancer agents directly in tumors, there is potential to greatly expand our understanding of drug response and develop more personalized cancer treatments. Implantable microdevices (IMD) have been recently developed to deliver microdoses of chemotherapeutic agents locally into confined regions of live tumors; the tissue can be subsequently removed and analyzed to evaluate drug response. This method has the potential to rapidly screen multiple drugs, but requires surgical tissue removal and only evaluates drug response at a single timepoint when the tissue is excised. Here, we describe a "lab-in-a-tumor" implantable microdevice (LIT-IMD) platform to image cell-death drug response within a live tumor, without requiring surgical resection or tissue processing. The LIT-IMD is inserted into a live tumor and delivers multiple drug microdoses into spatially discrete locations. In parallel, it locally delivers microdose levels of a fluorescent cell-death assay, which diffuses into drug-exposed tissues and accumulates at sites of cell death. An integrated miniaturized fluorescence imaging probe images each region to evaluate drug-induced cell death. We demonstrate ability to evaluate multi-drug response over 8 h using murine tumor models and show correlation with gold-standard conventional fluorescence microscopy and histopathology. This is the first demonstration of a fully integrated platform for evaluating multiple chemotherapy responses in situ. This approach could enable a more complete understanding of drug activity in live tumors, and could expand the utility of drug-response measurements to a wide range of settings where surgery is not feasible.

20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(46): 28918-28921, 2020 11 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33168727

RESUMEN

REV1/POLζ-dependent mutagenic translesion synthesis (TLS) promotes cell survival after DNA damage but is responsible for most of the resulting mutations. A novel inhibitor of this pathway, JH-RE-06, promotes cisplatin efficacy in cancer cells and mouse xenograft models, but the mechanism underlying this combinatorial effect is not known. We report that, unexpectedly, in two different mouse xenograft models and four human and mouse cell lines we examined in vitro cisplatin/JH-RE-06 treatment does not increase apoptosis. Rather, it increases hallmarks of senescence such as senescence-associated ß-galactosidase, increased p21 expression, micronuclei formation, reduced Lamin B1, and increased expression of the immune regulators IL6 and IL8 followed by cell death. Moreover, although p-γ-H2AX foci formation was elevated and ATR expression was low in single agent cisplatin-treated cells, the opposite was true in cells treated with cisplatin/JH-RE-06. These observations suggest that targeting REV1 with JH-RE-06 profoundly affects the nature of the persistent genomic damage after cisplatin treatment and also the resulting physiological responses. These data highlight the potential of REV1/POLζ inhibitors to alter the biological response to DNA-damaging chemotherapy and enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy.


Asunto(s)
Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/farmacología , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/farmacología , Neoplasias/tratamiento farmacológico , Nitroquinolinas/farmacología , Nucleotidiltransferasas/antagonistas & inhibidores , Envejecimiento/efectos de los fármacos , Envejecimiento/patología , Envejecimiento/fisiología , Animales , Línea Celular Tumoral , Cisplatino/administración & dosificación , Cisplatino/farmacología , ADN/biosíntesis , Daño del ADN/fisiología , Reparación del ADN , Replicación del ADN , ADN Polimerasa Dirigida por ADN/metabolismo , Resistencia a Antineoplásicos , Sinergismo Farmacológico , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/administración & dosificación , Humanos , Proteínas Mad2/metabolismo , Ratones , Mutagénesis , Neoplasias/enzimología , Neoplasias/patología , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Nucleotidiltransferasas/metabolismo , Células Tumorales Cultivadas , Ensayos Antitumor por Modelo de Xenoinjerto/métodos
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