Title of article :
Thin-Shelled PEGylated Perfluorooctyl Bromide Nanocapsules for Tumor-Targeted Ultrasound Contrast Agent
Author/Authors :
Achmad, Arifudin Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine - Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine - Showa-machi - Maebashi - Gunma, Japan , Yamaguchi, Aiko Department of Bioimaging Information Analysis - Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine - Showa-machi - Maebashi - Gunma, Japan , Hanaoka, Hirofumi Department of Bioimaging Information Analysis - Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine - Showa-machi - Maebashi - Gunma, Japan , Tsushima, Yoshito Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine - Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine - Showa-machi - Maebashi - Gunma, Japan
Abstract :
Shell thickness determines the acoustic response of polymer-based perfluorooctyl bromide (PFOB) nanocapsule ultrasound
contrast agents. PEGylation provides stealth property and arms for targeting moieties. We investigated a modulation in the
polymer formulation of carboxy-terminated poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) and poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide)-blockpolyethylene glycol (PLGA-b-PEG) to produce thin-shelled PFOB nanocapsules while keeping its echogenicity, stealth property,
and active targeting potential. Polymer formulation contains 40% PLGA-PEG that yields the PEGylated PFOB nanocapsules of
approximately 150 nm size with average thickness-to-radius ratio down to 0.15, which adequately hindered phagocytosis.
Functionalization with antibody enables in vitro tumor-specic targeting. Despite the acoustic response improvement, the in vivo
tumor accumulation was inadequate to generate an observable acoustic response to the ultrasound power at the clinical level. The
use of PLGA and PLGA-PEG polymer blend allows the production of thin-shelled PFOB nanocapsules with echogenicity
improvement while maintaining its potential for specic targeting.
Keywords :
Tumor , Ultrasound , Perfluorooctyl , PEGylated
Journal title :
Contrast Media and Molecular Imaging