Cargando…
Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer
INTRODUCTION: Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles (GA-(198)AuNPs) offer several advantages over traditional brachytherapy in the treatment of prostate cancer, including homogenous dose distribution and higher dose-rate irradiation. Our objective was to determine the short-term safety pr...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Dove Medical Press
2014
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4218919/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25378926 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S67333 |
_version_ | 1782342497337344000 |
---|---|
author | Axiak-Bechtel, Sandra M Upendran, Anandhi Lattimer, Jimmy C Kelsey, James Cutler, Cathy S Selting, Kim A Bryan, Jeffrey N Henry, Carolyn J Boote, Evan Tate, Deborah J Bryan, Margaret E Katti, Kattesh V Kannan, Raghuraman |
author_facet | Axiak-Bechtel, Sandra M Upendran, Anandhi Lattimer, Jimmy C Kelsey, James Cutler, Cathy S Selting, Kim A Bryan, Jeffrey N Henry, Carolyn J Boote, Evan Tate, Deborah J Bryan, Margaret E Katti, Kattesh V Kannan, Raghuraman |
author_sort | Axiak-Bechtel, Sandra M |
collection | PubMed |
description | INTRODUCTION: Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles (GA-(198)AuNPs) offer several advantages over traditional brachytherapy in the treatment of prostate cancer, including homogenous dose distribution and higher dose-rate irradiation. Our objective was to determine the short-term safety profile of GA-(198)AuNPs injected intralesionally. We proposed that a single treatment of GA-(198)AuNPs would be safe with minimal-to-no evidence of systemic or local toxicity. METHODS: Nine dogs with spontaneously occurring prostatic cancer were treated. Injections were performed with ultrasound or computerized tomography guidance. Complete blood counts, chemistry panels, and urinalyses were performed at weekly intervals for 1 month and imaging was repeated 4 weeks postinjection. Planar scintigraphic images were obtained within 30 minutes of injection. RESULTS: No statistically significant difference was found in any hematologic or biochemical parameter studied, nor was any evidence of tumor swelling or abscessation found in eight dogs with repeat imaging; one dog died secondary to urethral obstruction 12 days following injection. At 30 minutes postinjection, an average of 53% of injected dose in seven dogs was retained in the prostate, with loss of remaining activity in the bladder and urethra; no systemic uptake was detected. CONCLUSION: GA-(198)AuNP therapy had no short-term toxicity in the treatment of prostatic cancer. While therapeutic agent was found in the prostate immediately following injection, some loss of agent was detected in the bladder and urethra. Localization of radioactivity within the prostate was lower than anticipated and likely due to normal vestigial prostatic ducts. Therefore, further study of retention, dosimetry, long-term toxicity, and efficacy of this treatment is warranted prior to Phase I trials in men. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-4218919 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2014 |
publisher | Dove Medical Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-42189192014-11-06 Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer Axiak-Bechtel, Sandra M Upendran, Anandhi Lattimer, Jimmy C Kelsey, James Cutler, Cathy S Selting, Kim A Bryan, Jeffrey N Henry, Carolyn J Boote, Evan Tate, Deborah J Bryan, Margaret E Katti, Kattesh V Kannan, Raghuraman Int J Nanomedicine Original Research INTRODUCTION: Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles (GA-(198)AuNPs) offer several advantages over traditional brachytherapy in the treatment of prostate cancer, including homogenous dose distribution and higher dose-rate irradiation. Our objective was to determine the short-term safety profile of GA-(198)AuNPs injected intralesionally. We proposed that a single treatment of GA-(198)AuNPs would be safe with minimal-to-no evidence of systemic or local toxicity. METHODS: Nine dogs with spontaneously occurring prostatic cancer were treated. Injections were performed with ultrasound or computerized tomography guidance. Complete blood counts, chemistry panels, and urinalyses were performed at weekly intervals for 1 month and imaging was repeated 4 weeks postinjection. Planar scintigraphic images were obtained within 30 minutes of injection. RESULTS: No statistically significant difference was found in any hematologic or biochemical parameter studied, nor was any evidence of tumor swelling or abscessation found in eight dogs with repeat imaging; one dog died secondary to urethral obstruction 12 days following injection. At 30 minutes postinjection, an average of 53% of injected dose in seven dogs was retained in the prostate, with loss of remaining activity in the bladder and urethra; no systemic uptake was detected. CONCLUSION: GA-(198)AuNP therapy had no short-term toxicity in the treatment of prostatic cancer. While therapeutic agent was found in the prostate immediately following injection, some loss of agent was detected in the bladder and urethra. Localization of radioactivity within the prostate was lower than anticipated and likely due to normal vestigial prostatic ducts. Therefore, further study of retention, dosimetry, long-term toxicity, and efficacy of this treatment is warranted prior to Phase I trials in men. Dove Medical Press 2014-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4218919/ /pubmed/25378926 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S67333 Text en © 2014 Axiak-Bechtel et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. |
spellingShingle | Original Research Axiak-Bechtel, Sandra M Upendran, Anandhi Lattimer, Jimmy C Kelsey, James Cutler, Cathy S Selting, Kim A Bryan, Jeffrey N Henry, Carolyn J Boote, Evan Tate, Deborah J Bryan, Margaret E Katti, Kattesh V Kannan, Raghuraman Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
title | Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
title_full | Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
title_fullStr | Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
title_full_unstemmed | Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
title_short | Gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
title_sort | gum arabic-coated radioactive gold nanoparticles cause no short-term local or systemic toxicity in the clinically relevant canine model of prostate cancer |
topic | Original Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4218919/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25378926 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S67333 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT axiakbechtelsandram gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT upendrananandhi gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT lattimerjimmyc gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT kelseyjames gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT cutlercathys gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT seltingkima gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT bryanjeffreyn gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT henrycarolynj gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT booteevan gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT tatedeborahj gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT bryanmargarete gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT kattikatteshv gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer AT kannanraghuraman gumarabiccoatedradioactivegoldnanoparticlescausenoshorttermlocalorsystemictoxicityintheclinicallyrelevantcaninemodelofprostatecancer |