We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
GLOBETECH PUBLISHING LLC

Download Mobile App




Nanoparticles Cross Blood-Brain Barrier Enabling "Brain Tumor Painting”

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 25 Aug 2009
Print article
Researchers have been able to illuminate brain tumors by injecting into the bloodstream of mice fluorescent nanoparticles that safely cross the blood-brain barrier. The nanoparticles remained in mouse tumors for up to five days and did not show any evidence of damaging the blood-brain barrier.

Brain cancer is one of the most lethal of cancers. It is also one of the hardest to treat. Imaging results are frequently inexact because brain cancers are extremely invasive. Surgeons must saw through the skull and safely remove as much of the tumor as they can. Then doctors use radiation or chemotherapy to destroy cancerous cells in the surrounding tissue.

The study was conducted by researchers from the University of Washington (UW; Seattle, WA, USA) and published in the August 1, 2009, issue of the journal Cancer Research. The study's findings revealed that the nanoparticles improved the contrast in both magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and optical imaging, which is used during surgery. "Brain cancers are very invasive, different from the other cancers. They will invade the surrounding tissue and there is no clear boundary between the tumor tissue and the normal brain tissue,” said lead author Dr. Miqin Zhang, a UW professor of materials science and engineering.

Being unable to differentiate a boundary complicates the surgery. Severe cognitive problems are a common side effect. "If we can inject these nanoparticles with infrared dye, they will increase the contrast between the tumor tissue and the normal tissue,” Dr. Zhang said. "So during the surgery, the surgeons can see the boundary more precisely. We call it ‘brain tumor illumination or brain tumor painting.' The tumor will light up.”

Nanoimaging could also help with early cancer detection, according to Dr. Zhang. Current imaging techniques have a maximum resolution of 1 mm; nanoparticles could improve the resolution by a factor of 10 or more, allowing detection of smaller tumors and earlier treatment.

Until now, no nanoparticle used for imaging has been able to cross the blood-brain barrier and specifically bind to brain-tumor cells. With current techniques, clinicians inject dyes into the body and use drugs to temporarily open the blood-brain barrier, risking infection of the brain.

The UW team overcame this hurdle by constructing a nanoparticle that remains small in wet conditions. The particle was about 33 nm in diameter when wet, about one-third the size of similar particles used in other parts of the body.

Crossing the blood-brain barrier depends on the size of the particle, its lipid, or fat, content, and the electric charge on the particle. Dr. Zhang and colleagues built a particle that can pass through the barrier and reach tumors. To specifically target tumor cells they used chlorotoxin, a small peptide isolated from scorpion venom that many groups, including Dr. Zhang's, are examining for its tumor-targeting abilities. On the nanoparticle's surface Zhang placed a small fluorescent molecule for optical imaging, and binding sites that could be used for attaching other molecules.

Future research will evaluate this nanoparticle's potential for treating tumors, according to Dr. Zhang. She and colleagues already demonstrated that chlorotoxin combined with nanoparticles greatly slows tumors' metastasis. They will see whether that ability could extend to brain cancer, the most common solid tumor to affect children.

Merely improving imaging, however, would improve patient outcomes. "Precise imaging of brain tumors is phenomenally important. We know that patient survival for brain tumors is directly related to the amount of tumor that you can resect,” said coauthor Dr. Richard Ellenbogen, professor and chair of neurological surgery at the UW School of Medicine. "This is the next generation of cancer imaging,” he said. "The last generation was CT [computed tomography], this generation was MRI, and this is the next generation of advances.”

Related Links:

University of Washington


New
Stereotactic QA Phantom
StereoPHAN
New
Ultrasound Table
Women’s Ultrasound EA Table
MRI System
Ingenia Prodiva 1.5T CS
Radiology Software
DxWorks

Print article

Channels

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: Ultrasound detection of vascular changes post-RT corresponds to shifts in the immune microenvironment (Photo courtesy of Theranostics, DOI:10.7150/thno.97759)

Ultrasound Imaging Non-Invasively Tracks Tumor Response to Radiation and Immunotherapy

While immunotherapy holds promise in the fight against triple-negative breast cancer, many patients fail to respond to current treatments. A major challenge has been predicting and monitoring how individual... Read more

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: Autoradiography images showing binding of [18F]flortaucipir, [18F]MK6240, and [18F]PI2620 in prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum (A) and in whole-brain hemisphere (B) of control and AD brains (Photo courtesy of UFRGS)

Next-Gen Tau Radiotracers Outperform FDA-Approved Imaging Agents in Detecting Alzheimer’s

In Alzheimer’s disease, tau tangles are closely linked to cognitive decline: the greater the number of tangles, the more severe the cognitive impairment. By measuring the amount of tau in brain tissue... Read more

General/Advanced Imaging

view channel
Image: The rugged and miniaturized CT scanner is being designed for use beyond a typical hospital setting (Photo courtesy of Micro-X)

World’s First Mobile Whole-Body CT Scanner to Provide Diagnostics at POC

Conventional CT scanners dominate the global medical imaging market, holding approximately 30% of the market share. These scanners are the current standard for various diagnostic applications, including... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.