Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to present a novel therapeutic strategy combining use of intracellular magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) under an alternating magnetic field (AMF) and bleomycin (BLM), and to evaluate its therapeutic effect using tumor-bearing mice. Materials and Methods: MNPs (Resovist?, 1.05 mg iron) were incorporated into the hemagglutinating virus of Japan-envelope (HVJ-E) vector (~5 × 109 particles) (HVJ-E/MNPs) by centrifugation at 10,000 × g for 5 min at 4°C. Tumor-bearing mice were prepared by inoculating Colon-26 cells subcutaneously into the backs of BALB/c mice. When the tumor volume reached ~100 mm3, HVJ-E/MNPs and/or BLM were injected directly into the tumor. The AMF was applied to the mice one hour after the injection of agents (AMF treatment). The mice injected with HVJ-E/MNPs were imaged using our magnetic particle imaging (MPI) scanner immediately (13 min) before, immediately (22 min) after, and 3, 7, and 14 days after the injection of agents, and the temporal changes of the average and maximum MPI pixel values in the tumor were quantitatively evaluated. The therapeutic effect was evaluated by calculating the relative tumor volume growth (RTVG) from the tumor volumes measured each day. Transmission electron microscopic (TEM) observation of resected tumors was also performed to confirm the intracellular distribution of MNPs. Results: The AMF treatment combined with BLM significantly decreased the RTVG value compared with AMF treatment alone at 9 to 14 days, and BLM alone at 3 to 5 days after AMF treatment. The average and maximum MPI pixel values in the tumor were almost constant for 14 days. TEM observation confirmed that most of the HVJ-E/MNPs were internalized into tumor cells within one hour after injection. Conclusion: A novel therapeutic strategy with use of AMF treatment and BLM was presented, and the time-dependent change of MNPs in tumors was evaluated using MPI. The present results suggest that this novel strategy can suppress tumor volume growth over AMF treatment or BLM alone, and can be performed repeatedly with a single injection of HVJ-E/MNPs. They also suggest that HVJ-E is effective for internalizing MNPs into cancer cells and that MPI allows for longitudinal monitoring of the distribution of MNPs in tumors.

Highlights

  • Hyperthermia is a well-established approach to cancer therapy, and is based on the fact that cancer cells are more sensitive to heat than normal tissues [1]

  • The mean temperature in the tumor rose by approximately 1.3 ̊C and that in the rectum decreased by approximately 1.9 ̊C during the alternating magnetic field (AMF) treatment, there were no significant differences between the temperatures at the beginning and end of the AMF treatment in both the tumor and rectum

  • This study investigated the usefulness of a novel therapeutic strategy combining the use of intracellular magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) under an AMF and BLM in tumor-bearing mice, and quantitatively evaluated the temporal changes of MNPs in tumors using magnetic particle imaging (MPI)

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Summary

Introduction

Hyperthermia is a well-established approach to cancer therapy, and is based on the fact that cancer cells are more sensitive to heat than normal tissues [1]. MNPs heat through hysteresis loss and/or magnetic relaxation such as Néel and Brownian relaxation under an alternating magnetic field (AMF) [3] In addition to their heating property under an AMF, MNPs have several biomedical advantages. They are suitable for drug delivery because their size is small enough to get close to biological entities, and their surface is modified with antibodies, polymers, and functionalized peptides [4]. Owing to their magnetic property, they can be manipulated by an external magnetic field to accumulate to targeted regions [5]. If MNPs can be delivered to tumors, magnetic hyperthermia can selectively heat tumor cells without damaging normal tissues [6]

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