Short Drug-Light Intervals Improve Liposomal Chemophototherapy in Mice Bearing MIA PaCa-2 Xenografts.
Dandan LuoKevin A CarterJumin GengXuedan HeJonathan F LovellPublished in: Molecular pharmaceutics (2018)
Chemophototherapy (CPT) is an emerging tumor treatment that combines phototherapy and chemotherapy. Long-circulating (LC) liposomes can stably incorporate 2 mol % porphyrin-phospholipid (PoP) in the bilayer and load doxorubicin (Dox) to generate LC-Dox-PoP liposomes, for single-agent CPT. Following intravenous administration to mice, LC-Dox-PoP liposomes (2 mg/kg Dox) circulated with similar blood concentration ranges produced by a typical human clinical dose of DOXIL (50 mg/m2 Dox). This dosing approach aims to achieve physiologically relevant Dox and PoP concentrations as well as CPT vascular responses in mice bearing subcutaneous human pancreatic MIA PaCa-2 xenografts. Phototreatment with 2 mg/kg LC-Dox-PoP induced vascular permeabilization, leading to a 12.5-fold increase in Dox tumor influx estimated by a pharmacokinetic model, based on experimental data. Shorter drug-light intervals (0.5-3 h) led to greater tumoral drug deposition and improved treatment outcomes, compared to longer drug-light intervals. At 2 mg/kg Dox, CPT with LC-Dox-PoP liposomes induced tumor regression and growth inhibition, whereas chemotherapy using several other formulations of Dox did not. LC-Dox-PoP liposomes were well tolerated at the 2 mg/kg dose.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- simultaneous determination
- endothelial cells
- drug induced
- mass spectrometry
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiation therapy
- high dose
- photodynamic therapy
- metabolic syndrome
- locally advanced
- high fat diet induced
- machine learning
- high resolution
- diabetic rats
- skeletal muscle
- big data
- fatty acid
- smoking cessation
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- data analysis