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Gold nanoparticles meet medical radionuclides

Noami Daems, Carine Michiels, Stéphane Lucas, Sarah Baatout, An Aerts

2021Nuclear Medicine and Biology65 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Thanks to their unique optical and physicochemical properties, gold nanoparticles have gained increased interest as radiosensitizing, photothermal therapy and optical imaging agents to enhance the effectiveness of cancer detection and therapy. Furthermore, their ability to carry multiple medically relevant radionuclides broadens their use to nuclear medicine SPECT and PET imaging as well as targeted radionuclide therapy. In this review, we discuss the radiolabeling process of gold nanoparticles and their use in (multimodal) nuclear medicine imaging to better understand their specific distribution, uptake and retention in different in vivo cancer models. In addition, radiolabeled gold nanoparticles enable image-guided therapy is reviewed as well as the enhancement of targeted radionuclide therapy and nanobrachytherapy through an increased dose deposition and radiosensitization, as demonstrated by multiple Monte Carlo studies and experimental in vitro and in vivo studies.

Topics & Concepts

Photothermal therapyColloidal goldRadionuclide therapyIn vivoSpect imagingRadionuclideNuclear medicineNanoparticleMedical physicsNanotechnologyMaterials scienceMedicinePhysicsBiologyQuantum mechanicsBiotechnologyRadiation Therapy and DosimetryNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics
Gold nanoparticles meet medical radionuclides | Litcius