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Zinc-Doped Iron Oxide Nanoparticles as a Proton-Activatable Agent for Dose Range Verification in Proton Therapy.

Marta Ibáñez-MoraguesIrene Fernández-BarahonaRocío SantacruzMarta OteoVíctor M Luján-RodríguezMaría Muñoz-HernandoNatalia MagroJuan I LagaresEduardo Romero SanzSamuel EspañaAndrea Espinosa RodriguezMiguel García-DíezVíctor Martínez-NouvilasVíctor Sánchez-TemblequeJosé Manuel UdíasVíctor Valladolid-OnechaMiguel Á Martín-ReyEdilia I Almeida-CordonSílvia Viñals I OnsèsJosé Manuel PérezLuis Mario FraileFernando HerranzMiguel Ángel Morcillo Alonso
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Proton therapy allows the treatment of specific areas and avoids the surrounding tissues. However, this technique has uncertainties in terms of the distal dose fall-off. A promising approach to studying the proton range is the use of nanoparticles as proton-activatable agents that produce detectable signals. For this, we developed an iron oxide nanoparticle doped with Zn (IONP@Zn-cit) with a hydrodynamic size of 10 nm and stability in serum. Cytotoxicity, defined as half of the surveillance, was 100 μg Zn/mL in the U251 cell line. The effect on clonogenic cell death was tested after X-ray irradiation, which suggested a radioprotective effect of these nanoparticles at low concentrations (1-10 μg Zn/mL). To evaluate the production of positron emitters and prompt-gamma signals, IONP@Zn-cit was irradiated with protons, obtaining prompt-gamma signals at the lowest measured concentration (10 mg Zn/mL). Finally, 67 Ga-IONP@Zn-cit showed accumulation in the liver and spleen and an accumulation in the tumor tissue of 0.95% ID/g in a mouse model of U251 cells. These results suggest the possibility of using Zn nanoparticles as proton-activatable agents to verify the range by prompt gamma detection and face the challenges of prompt gamma detection in a specific biological situation, opening different avenues to go forward in this field.
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