Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer death in the US and remains the most difficult cancer type to treat with less than 5% of patients surviving 5 years after diagnosis. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy are the only options for these patients. However, the efficacy of systemic chemotherapy is limited by poor efficiency in the delivery and systemic toxicity. Recent research in personalized oncology has concentrated on tumor targeted delivery and controlled release of therapeutic agents with assistances of non-invasive imaging methods to monitor the delivery and accumulation of the drugs in the tumor and to assess the therapeutic response. In this project, we propose to develop and test a multi-functional imaging- delivery magnetic nanoparticle platform that combines the capabilities of demonstrated magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast enhancement, receptor specific tumor targeting and optimized drug loading and release for MRI-guided systemic delivery of chemotherapy drug, gemcitabine, into pancreatic tumors.
Our Specific Aim 1 focuses on the design, preparation and characterization of MRI-capable nanoparticles coated with functionalized anti-fouling stealth polymers that can conjugate targeting ligands and may reduce non-specific uptake of nanoparticles by normal tissues for improved tumor targeting efficiency. We will develop methods that can conjugate gemcitabine onto the tumor targeting nanoparticles for enzyme-activated intracellular release. The drug-nanoparticle complex will target the urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR), a cellular receptor highly expressed in pancreatic cancer and active tumor stromal cells, to facilitate the intratumoral and subcellular delivery of gemcitabine. With the goal of translating the proposed magnetic nanoparticle imaging-delivery platform into clinical applications, we will investigate the biodistribution, systemic toxicity and pharmacokinetics of this delivery platform in normal and tumor bearing mice.
In Aim 2, we will develop novel MRI approaches that are designed for specific and sensitive detection of magnetic nanoparticle delivery vehicles in vivo. For MRI guided drug delivery applications, our objective is to design and test a set of MRI methods, such as ultra-short TE imaging, that not only enable us to track and follow the delivery vehicles with a high sensitivity and better visualization but also provide quantitative information on intra-tumoral delivery efficiency. New MRI methods to assess the tumor response to treatment will also be tested.
In Aim 3, we will evaluate intratumoral distribution of nanoparticles, investigate their tumor targeted therapeutic effect, test and optimize the imaging capabilities of following and quantifying the delivery and accumulation of the drug in the targeted tumors as well as monitoring response to therapy in pancreatic cancer animal models using MRI.

Public Health Relevance

Systemic chemotherapy is a common approach to the chronic management of many cancers. However, its efficacy is limited by poor efficiency in delivery of the therapeutic agent to the tumor and systemic toxicity. In this project, we propose to develop a multi-functional imaging-delivery magnetic nanoparticle platform that combines capabilities of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), receptor specific tumor targeting and optimized drug loading and release for MRI guided systemic delivery of chemotherapy drugs for the treatment of pancreatic cancer.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA154846-05
Application #
8852087
Study Section
Clinical Molecular Imaging and Probe Development (CMIP)
Program Officer
Tandon, Pushpa
Project Start
2011-08-01
Project End
2017-05-01
Budget Start
2015-06-01
Budget End
2017-05-01
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Emory University
Department
Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
066469933
City
Atlanta
State
GA
Country
United States
Zip Code
30322
Li, Yuancheng; Xu, Yaolin; Fleischer, Candace C et al. (2018) Impact of Anti-Biofouling Surface Coatings on the Properties of Nanomaterials and Their Biomedical Applications. J Mater Chem B 6:9-24
Lin, Run; Huang, Jing; Wang, Liya et al. (2018) Bevacizumab and near infrared probe conjugated iron oxide nanoparticles for vascular endothelial growth factor targeted MR and optical imaging. Biomater Sci 6:1517-1525
Wang, Liya; Huang, Jing; Chen, Hongbo et al. (2017) Exerting Enhanced Permeability and Retention Effect Driven Delivery by Ultrafine Iron Oxide Nanoparticles with T1-T2 Switchable Magnetic Resonance Imaging Contrast. ACS Nano 11:4582-4592
Lin, Run; Li, Yuancheng; MacDonald, Tobey et al. (2017) Improving sensitivity and specificity of capturing and detecting targeted cancer cells with anti-biofouling polymer coated magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles. Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces 150:261-270
Orza, Anamaria; Wu, Hui; Xu, Yaolin et al. (2017) One-Step Facile Synthesis of Highly Magnetic and Surface Functionalized Iron Oxide Nanorods for Biomarker-Targeted Applications. ACS Appl Mater Interfaces 9:20719-20727
Zhu, Lei; Zhou, Zhiyang; Mao, Hui et al. (2017) Magnetic nanoparticles for precision oncology: theranostic magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles for image-guided and targeted cancer therapy. Nanomedicine (Lond) 12:73-87
Zhu, Lei; Staley, Charles; Kooby, David et al. (2017) Current status of biomarker and targeted nanoparticle development: The precision oncology approach for pancreatic cancer therapy. Cancer Lett 388:139-148
Gao, Ning; Bozeman, Erica N; Qian, Weiping et al. (2017) Tumor Penetrating Theranostic Nanoparticles for Enhancement of Targeted and Image-guided Drug Delivery into Peritoneal Tumors following Intraperitoneal Delivery. Theranostics 7:1689-1704
Xie, Huiqiao; Cai, Weixing; Yang, Lily et al. (2016) Reducing radiation dose in grating based x-ray phase contrast CT with twin-peaks in its phase stepping curves. Med Phys 43:5942
Orza, Anamaria; Yang, Yi; Feng, Ting et al. (2016) A nanocomposite of Au-AgI core/shell dimer as a dual-modality contrast agent for x-ray computed tomography and photoacoustic imaging. Med Phys 43:589

Showing the most recent 10 out of 31 publications