Litcius/Paper detail

Near-Infrared Fluorogenic Spray for Rapid Tumor Sensing

Ching‐Hsuan Tung, Myung Shin Han, Zhenhua Shen, Brian D. Gray, Koon Y. Pak, Jianguang Wang

2021ACS Sensors20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Surgical resection of cancerous tissues is a critical procedure for solid tumor treatment. During the operation, the surgeon mostly identifies the cancerous tissues by naked-eye visualization under white light without aid, therefore, the outcome heavily relies on the surgeon’s experience. A near-infrared pH-responsive fluorogenic dye, CypH-11, was designed to be used as a sensitive cancer spray to highlight cancerous tissues during surgical operations, minimizing the surgeon’s subjective judgment. CypH-11, pKa 6.0, emits almost no fluorescence at neutral pH but fluoresces brightly in an acidic environment, a ubiquitous consequence of cancer cell proliferation. After topical application, CypH-11 was absorbed quickly, and its fluorescence signal in the cancerous tissue was developed within a minute. The signal-to-background ratio was 1.3 and 1.5 at 1 and 10 min, respectively. The fluorogenic property and near-instant signal development capability enable the “spray-and-see” concept. This fast-acting CypH-11 spray could be a handy and effective tool for fluorescence-guided surgery, identifying small cancerous lesions in real time for optimal resection without systemic toxicity.

Topics & Concepts

FluorescenceResectionBiomedical engineeringNaked eyeCancer surgeryCancerComputer scienceChemistrySurgeryMedicineOpticsInternal medicinePhysicsNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsPhotodynamic Therapy Research StudiesLanthanide and Transition Metal Complexes