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Optimal treatment occasion for ultrasound stimulated microbubbles in promoting gemcitabine delivery to VX2 tumors

Authors :
Tingting Luo
Luhua Bai
Yi Zhang
Leidan Huang
Hui Li
Shunji Gao
Xiaoxiao Dong
Ningshan Li
Zheng Liu
Source :
Drug Delivery, Vol 29, Iss 1, Pp 2796-2804 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

Abstract

Ultrasound stimulated microbubbles (USMB) is a widely used technology that can promote chemotherapeutic delivery to tumors yet the best treatment occasion for USMB is unknown or ignored. We aimed to determine the optimal treatment occasion for USMB treatment to enhance tumor chemotherapy to achieve the highest drug concentration in tumors. Experiments were conducted on VX2 tumors implanted in 60 rabbits. Gemcitabine (GEM) was intravenously infused as a chemotherapeutic agent and USMB was administered before, during or after chemotherapy. USMB was conducted with a modified diagnostic ultrasound at 3 MHz employing short bursts (5 cycles and 0.125% duty cycle) at 0.26 MPa in combination with a lipid microbubble. Subsequently, tumor blood perfusion quantitation, drug concentration detection, and fluorescence microscopy were performed. The results showed that the group that received USMB treatment immediately after GEM infusion had the highest drug concentration in tumors, which was 2.83 times that of the control group. Fifteen tumors were then treated repeatedly with the optimal USMB-plus-GEM combination, and along with the GEM and the control groups, were studied for tumor growth, tumor cell proliferation, apoptosis, and related cytokine contents. The combined treatment significantly inhibited tumor growth and promoted apoptosis. The levels of related cytokines, including HIF-1α, decreased after six combination therapies. These results suggest that the optimal treatment occasion for USMB occurs immediately after chemotherapy and tumor hypoxia improves after multiple combination therapies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10717544 and 15210464
Volume :
29
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Drug Delivery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.94436d7649c444eaeae11579316b86d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/10717544.2022.2115163