Inefficient
tumor accumulation and penetration remain as the main
challenges to therapy efficacy of lung cancer. Local delivery of smart
nanoclusters can increase drug penetration and provide superior antitumor
effects than systemic routes. Here, we report self-assembled pH-sensitive
superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoclusters (SPIONCs) that enhance in situ ferroptosis and apoptosis with radiotherapy and
chemodynamic therapy. After pulmonary delivery in orthotopic lung
cancer, SPIONCs disintegrate into smaller nanoparticles and release
more iron ions in an acidic microenvironment. Under single-dose X-ray
irradiation, endogenous superoxide dismutase converts superoxide radicals
produced by mitochondria to hydrogen peroxide, which in turn generates
hydroxyl radicals by the Fenton reaction from iron ions accumulated
inside the tumor. Finally, irradiation and iron ions enhance tumor
lipid peroxidation and induce cell apoptosis and ferroptosis. Thus,
rationally designed pulmonary delivered nanoclusters provide a promising
strategy for noninvasive imaging of lung cancer and synergistic therapy.
Low accumulation of anticancer drugs in tumors and serious
systemic
toxicity remain the main challenges to the clinical efficiency of
pharmaceuticals. Pulmonary delivery of nanoscale-based drug delivery
systems offered a strategy to increase antitumor activity with minimal
adverse exposure. Herein, we report an osimertinib-loaded perfluoro-15-crown-5-ether
(AZD9291-PFCE) nanoemulsion, through intratracheal and intravenous
delivery, synergizes with 19F magnetic resonance imaging
(19F MRI)-guided low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU)
for lung cancer therapy. Pulmonary delivery of AZD9291-PFCE nanoemulsion
in orthotopic lung carcinoma models achieves quick distribution of
the nanoemulsion in lung tissues and tumors without short-term and
long-term toxic effects. Furthermore, LIFU can trigger drug release
from the AZD9291-PFCE nanoemulsion and specifically increases tumor
vascular and tumor tissue permeability. 19F MRI was applied
to quantify nanoemulsion accumulation in tumors in real time after
LIFU irradiation. We validate the treatment effect of AZD9291-PFCE
nanoemulsion in resected human lung cancer tissues, proving the translational
potential to enhance clinical outcomes of lung cancer therapy. Thus,
this work presents a promising pulmonary nanoemulsion delivery system
of osimertinib (AZD9291) for targeted therapy of lung cancer without
severe side effects.
Recent advances in intratracheal delivery strategies
have sparked
considerable biomedical interest in developing this promising approach
for lung cancer diagnosis and treatment. However, there are very few
relevant studies on the behavior and mechanism of imaging nanoparticles
(NPs) after intratracheal delivery. Here, we found that nanosized
perfluoro-15-crown-5-ether (PFCE NPs, ∼200 nm) exhibite significant 19F-MRI signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) enhancement than perfluorooctyl
bromide (PFOB NPs) up to day 7 after intratracheal delivery. Alveolar
macrophages (AMs) engulf PFCE NPs, become PFCE NPs-laden AMs, and
then migrate into the tumor margin, resulting in increased tumor PFCE
concentration and 19F-MRI signals. AMs-mediated translocation
of PFCE NPs to lung draning lymph nodes (dLNs) decreases the background
PFCE concentration. Our results shed light on the dynamic AMs-mediated
translocation of intratracheally delivered PFC NPs for effective lung
tumor visualization and reveal a pathway to develop and promote the
clinical translation of an intratracheal delivery-based imaging strategy.
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