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Trapped in Endosome PEGylated Ultra‐Small Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Enable Extraordinarily High MR Imaging Contrast for Hepatocellular Carcinomas

Dandan Zhou, Shanshan Shan, Lei Chen, Cang Li, Hongzhao Wang, Kuan Lu, Jianxian Ge, Ning Wang, Mohammad Javad Afshari, Yaqin Zhang, Jianfeng Zeng, Mingyuan Gao

2024Advanced Science19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The early diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) remains challenging in the clinic. Primovist-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) aids HCC diagnosis but loses sensitivity for tumors <2 cm. Therefore, developing advanced MRI contrast agents is imperative for improving the diagnostic accuracy of HCCs in very-early-stage. To address this challenge, PEGylated ultra-small iron oxide nanoparticles (PUSIONPs) are synthesized and employed as liver-specific T1 MRI contrast agents. Intravenous delivery produces simultaneous hyperintense HCC and hypointense hepatic parenchyma signals on T1 imaging, creating an extraordinarily high tumor-to-liver contrast. Systematic studies uncover PUSIONP distribution in hepatic parenchyma, HCC lesions at the organ, tissue, cellular, and subcellular levels, revealing endosomal confinement of PUSIONP without aggregation. By mimicking such situations, the dependency of relaxometric properties on local PUSIONP concentration is investigated, emphasizing the key role of different endosomal concentrations in liver and tumor cells for high tumor-to-liver contrast and clear tumor boundaries. These findings offer exceptional imaging capabilities for early HCC diagnosis, potentially benefiting real HCC patients.

Topics & Concepts

HCCSHepatocellular carcinomaMagnetic resonance imagingEndosomeParenchymaMedicineLiver tumorLiver parenchymaPathologyCancer researchRadiologyInternal medicineReceptorHepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and PrognosisMRI in cancer diagnosisNanoparticle-Based Drug Delivery
Trapped in Endosome PEGylated Ultra‐Small Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Enable Extraordinarily High MR Imaging Contrast for Hepatocellular Carcinomas | Litcius