Tiny drug-laden "popping bubbles" lead triple-attack treatment for liver cancer

12/7/2015 Rick Kubetz, Engineering Communications Office

Research team at Illinois, led by Dipanjan Pan, developed a new way of treating liver cancer with nanobubbles.

Written by Rick Kubetz, Engineering Communications Office

In an interdisciplinary collaboration between prominent academic and industry investigators, researchers have discovered a novel method for repositioning an FDA-approved anti-cancer compound so it can specifically target liver cancer tumors. A “triple attack” technique combining chemotherapy, thermal ablation, and hyperthermia provided a highly targeted, yet minimally invasive approach.

 

Bexarotene prodrug in nanobubble form is inserted directly into the tumor using a flexible catheter; ultrasound ablation therapy 'pops' the bubbles to release the agent.
Bexarotene prodrug in nanobubble form is inserted directly into the tumor using a flexible catheter; ultrasound ablation therapy 'pops' the bubbles to release the agent.
Bexarotene prodrug in nanobubble form is inserted directly into the tumor using a flexible catheter; ultrasound ablation therapy 'pops' the bubbles to release the agent.

“In this study, we re-purposed the topical agent bexarotene (Targretin®) — currently in limited use for cutaneous manifestations of T-cell lymphomas — and re-engineered it for use in solid tumor applications by forming self-assembling nanobubbles,” explained Dipanjan Pan, assistant professor of Bioengineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who led the study. “These tiny bubbles filled with Targretin in ‘prodrug’ form can be ‘popped’ to release the drug inside liver cancer cells, activating the prodrug during cellular internalization process. The probability of its undesired systemic release is minimal due to this highly selective activation mechanism, which helps to spare the healthy cells.”

 

The American Cancer Society estimated that by the end of this year, approximately 1.66 million new cancer cases will be diagnosed in the United States, and the figure goes up once the global statistics are taken into consideration. Developing new cancer-treatment drugs through a conventional drug discovery pipeline is time-consuming and expensive. One solution is to repurpose a drug that is already approved for human use and re-examine it for treating other diseases.

“Liver cancer is normally difficult to attack and usually requires significant surgical intervention,” said Santosh Misra, a postdoctoral research associate in Pan’s laboratory and first author of the paper, “Trimodal Therapy: Combining Hyperthermia with Repurposed Bexarotene and Ultrasound for Treating Liver Cancer.” The paper was published in ACS Nano, the premier nanotechnology journal of the American Chemical Society. “In this study, we successfully re-purposed and repackaged bexarotene into a sensitive nanobubble form, inserted it directly into the tumor using a flexible catheter, and used ultrasound ablation therapy to ‘pop’ the bubbles to release the agent,” Misra said.

The university researchers teamed up with a biomedical company, Acoustic MedSystem, to apply a newly designed catheter-based ultrasound therapeutic device with spatially tracked 3D ultrasound imaging.

“Using an in vitro model of hepatocellular carcinoma and an in vivo large animal model of liver ablation, we demonstrated the effectiveness of bexarotene prodrug nanobubbles when used in conjunction with catheter-based ultrasound, thereby highlighting the therapeutic promise of this trimodal approach,” Pan added. “Using a swine cancer model for drug screening is rare, providing us a great opportunity to study this new class of therapeutic nanobubble in a preclinical system closer to human. Furthermore, the study uniquely looks at the system from atomic to molecular to cell, tissue, and then organ level. With this result in hand, the next step could be to test them in humans!"

In addition to Pan, project investigators include Klaus Schulten and Larry Schook, University of Illinois; Partha Ray, Carle Health System; and Everette C. Burdette, Acoustic MedSystem.


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This story was published December 7, 2015.