Recent Advances in Functional-Polymer-Decorated Transition-Metal Nanomaterials for Bioimaging and Cancer Therapy.
Wei ZhaoAihua LiAitang ZhangYiwei ZhengJingquan LiuPublished in: ChemMedChem (2018)
In this review, we focus on recent advances in the synthesis of polymer-functionalized transition-metal-based nanomaterials and follow this up by discussing their applications in bioimaging diagnosis and cancer therapy. Transition-metal-based nanomaterials show great potential in cancer therapy owing to their intensive near-IR absorption, excellent photothermal conversion efficiency, strong X-ray attenuation, and magnetic properties. Functional polymers are usually introduced by a one-step or multistep method to further endow these nanomaterials with great biocompatibility and physiological stability. Polymer-decorated transition-metal nanomaterials show great potential in multimodal imaging diagnosis (photoacoustic imaging, computed tomography, photoluminescence imaging, positron emission tomography, etc.) and cancer therapy (chemotherapy, photothermal therapy, microwave therapy, radiotherapy, photodynamic therapy). At the end of this review, the prospects of these polymer-decorated transition-metal-based nanomaterials are also discussed.
Keyphrases
- transition metal
- cancer therapy
- quantum dots
- positron emission tomography
- computed tomography
- drug delivery
- high resolution
- photodynamic therapy
- fluorescence imaging
- magnetic resonance imaging
- highly efficient
- dual energy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- living cells
- fluorescent probe
- stem cells
- magnetic resonance
- pain management
- gold nanoparticles
- chemotherapy induced