Back to Search Start Over

Improved Tumor Control Following Radiosensitization with Ultrasound-Sensitive Oxygen Microbubbles and Tumor Mitochondrial Respiration Inhibitors in a Preclinical Model of Head and Neck Cancer

Authors :
Lacerda, Quezia
Falatah, Hebah
Liu, Ji-Bin
Wessner, Corinne
Oeffinger, Brian
Rochani, Ankit K.
Leeper, Dennis B
Forsberg, Flemming
Curry, Joseph M.
Kaushal, Gagan
Keith, Scott W
O'Kane, Patrick
Wheatley, Margaret A
Eisenbrey, John R.
Lacerda, Quezia
Falatah, Hebah
Liu, Ji-Bin
Wessner, Corinne
Oeffinger, Brian
Rochani, Ankit K.
Leeper, Dennis B
Forsberg, Flemming
Curry, Joseph M.
Kaushal, Gagan
Keith, Scott W
O'Kane, Patrick
Wheatley, Margaret A
Eisenbrey, John R.
Source :
Department of Radiology Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Tumor hypoxia (oxygen deficiency) is a major contributor to radiotherapy resistance. Ultrasound-sensitive microbubbles containing oxygen have been explored as a mechanism for overcoming tumor hypoxia locally prior to radiotherapy. Previously, our group demonstrated the ability to encapsulate and deliver a pharmacological inhibitor of tumor mitochondrial respiration (lonidamine (LND)), which resulted in ultrasound-sensitive microbubbles loaded with O2 and LND providing prolonged oxygenation relative to oxygenated microbubbles alone. This follow-up study aimed to evaluate the therapeutic response to radiation following the administration of oxygen microbubbles combined with tumor mitochondrial respiration inhibitors in a head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) tumor model. The influences of different radiation dose rates and treatment combinations were also explored. The results demonstrated that the co-delivery of O2 and LND successfully sensitized HNSCC tumors to radiation, and this was also enhanced with oral metformin, significantly slowing tumor growth relative to unsensitized controls (p < 0.01). Microbubble sensitization was also shown to improve overall animal survival. Importantly, effects were found to be radiation dose-rate-dependent, reflecting the transient nature of tumor oxygenation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Department of Radiology Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1379823552
Document Type :
Electronic Resource