Gold-Nanoparticle-Enhanced Radio-Fluorogenic Hydrogel Sensor for Low Radiation Doses in Clinical Radiotherapy.
Xingyu DongYuan TianFengqing WangChong ChenYunlong WangJun MaPublished in: Polymers (2022)
Radio-fluorogenic hydrogel dosimeters are urgently needed in radiotherapy for 3D dose verification. However, few hydrogel sensors have been reported at low absorbed doses under 2 Gy which meets the requirements of clinical practice. Here, we report a new type of gold-nanoparticle-enhanced radio-fluorogenic agarose hydrogel with coumarin as the dose-responsive material. An optimal composition of 3 wt% of agarose, 0.1 mM of gold nanoparticles, and 0.5 mM coumarin was selected. The addition of gold nanoparticles enhanced the hydroxyl radicals generated from the radiolysis of water, which can react with coumarin and generate fluorescent 7-hydroxy-coumarin and, eventually, achieve low-dose verification of 0-2.4 Gy with a high linear correlation coefficient. These findings provide an effective method for 3D dose verification, and will inspire the development of other radio-fluorogenic sensing hydrogels as well.
Keyphrases
- gold nanoparticles
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- fluorescent probe
- tissue engineering
- wound healing
- low dose
- living cells
- early stage
- clinical practice
- cancer therapy
- radiation induced
- locally advanced
- radiation therapy
- reduced graphene oxide
- drug release
- squamous cell carcinoma
- high dose
- quantum dots
- extracellular matrix
- diffusion weighted imaging