Abstract

Background Photothermal therapy is currently under the spotlight to improve the efficacy of minimally invasive thermal treatment of solid tumors. The interplay of several factors including the radiation wavelengths and the nanoparticle characteristics underlie the thermal outcome. However, a quantitative thermal analysis in in vivo models embedding nanoparticles and under different near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths is missing. Purpose We evaluate the thermal effects induced by different combinations of NIR laser wavelengths and gold nanorods (GNRs) in breast cancer tumor models in mice. Materials and methods Four laser wavelengths within the therapeutic window, i.e., 808, 940, 975, and 1064 nm were employed, and corresponding GNRs were intratumorally injected. The tissue thermal response was evaluated in terms of temperature profile and time constants, considering the step response of a first-order system as a model. Results The 808 nm and 1064 nm lasers experienced the highest temperature enhancements (>24%) in presence of GNRs compared to controls; conversely, 975 nm and 940 nm lasers showed high temperatures in controls due to significant tissue absorption and the lowest temperature difference with and without GNRs (temperature enhancement <10%). The presence of GNRs resulted in small time constants, thus quicker laser-induced thermal response (from 67 s to 33 s at 808 nm). Conclusions The thermal responses of different GNR-laser wavelength combinations quantitatively validate the widespread usage of 808 nm laser for nanoparticle-assisted photothermal procedures. Moreover, our results provide insights on other usable wavelengths, toward the identification of an effective photothermal treatment strategy for the removal of focal malignancies.

Highlights

  • Invasive thermal ablation is a high-potential therapeutic procedure for cancer treatment

  • An IR thermographic camera (FLIR System, A655sc, with The temperature values acquired with thermographic imag640 Â 480 pixels spatial resolution, 62 C accuracy) was used ing for 808 nm laser irradiation indicated a mean value of the maximum temperatures (Tmax) of 68 ± 2 C and 52 ± 1 C for gold nanorods (GNRs)-injected (12.5 lg/tumor) and saline control tumors, respectively, after 90 s of laser irradiation, in the selected region of interest (ROI)

  • Temperature results of NIR-irradiated tumors In Figure 5, representative temperature trends registered for the irradiated breast cancer tumor models treated with the different GNRs and phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) are depicted for each radiation wavelength, together with the thermographs showing the superficial temperature distribution after 90 s-exposure time

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive thermal ablation is a high-potential therapeutic procedure for cancer treatment. In this technique, a localized tumor temperature increase is provided to induce a circumscribed irreversible cell injury and, apoptosis and coagulative necrosis [1]. The predominant chromophores in vascularized tissue (water, blood, melanin, fat, yellow pigments) present a decreased absorption coefficient in the near-infrared (NIR) region, between 800 and 1200 nm. This range of wavelengths is called ‘therapeutic window’. Purpose: We evaluate the thermal effects induced by different combinations of NIR laser wavelengths and gold nanorods (GNRs) in breast cancer tumor models in mice. Our results provide insights on other usable wavelengths, toward the identification of an effective photothermal treatment strategy for the removal of focal malignancies

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