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Gold nanoparticles enhance the radiation therapy of a murine squamous cell carcinoma

371

Citations

40

References

2010

Year

TLDR

The study tests whether gold nanoparticles enhance radiation therapy efficacy in a radioresistant mouse SCCVII head‑and‑neck squamous cell carcinoma model and identifies key influencing parameters. Mice bearing subcutaneous SCCVII tumors received x‑ray irradiation with or without intravenous gold nanoparticles, varying dose, beam energy, temporal fractionation, and hyperthermia. Gold‑nanoparticle–enhanced radiation proved more effective at higher doses and specific beam energies, and hyperthermia synergized with this effect, demonstrating that dose, energy, and hyperthermia modulate the therapeutic benefit of gold nanoparticles in this model.

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that gold nanoparticle (AuNP, nanogold)-enhanced radiation therapy (nanogold radiation therapy, NRT) is efficacious when treating the radiation resistant and highly aggressive mouse head and neck squamous cell carcinoma model, SCCVII, and to identify parameters influencing the efficacy of NRT. Subcutaneous (sc) SCCVII leg tumors in mice were irradiated with x-rays at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) with and without prior intravenous (iv) administration of AuNPs. Variables studied included radiation dose, beam energy, temporal fractionation and hyperthermia. AuNP-mediated NRT was shown to be effective for the sc SCCVII model. AuNPs were more effective at 42 Gy than at 30 Gy (both at 68 keV median beam energy) compared to controls without gold. Similarly, at 157 keV median beam energy, 50.6 Gy NRT was more effective than 44 Gy NRT. At the same radiation dose ( approximately 42 Gy), 68 keV was more effective than 157 keV. Hyperthermia and radiation therapy (RT) were synergistic and AuNPs enhanced this synergy, thereby further reducing TCD50 s (tumor control dose 50%) and increasing long-term survivals. It is concluded that gold nanoparticles enhance the radiation therapy of a radioresistant mouse squamous cell carcinoma. The data show that radiation dose, energy and hyperthermia influence efficacy and better define the potential utility of gold nanoparticles for cancer x-ray therapy.

References

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