Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1426993 Journal of Controlled Release 2007 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Brachytherapy has many potential roles in cancer therapy. However, major constraints are associated with placement and removal procedures of the brachytherapy machinery. An attractive approach would be the use of a biodegradable implant loaded with a radioisotope, thus enabling targeted radiotherapy, while reducing the need for surgical procedures for the removal of brachytherapy hardware. In this study, crosslinked chitosan (Ct) hydrogels were prepared and loaded with 131I-norcholesterol (131I–NC). The radioactive hydrogels (131I–NC–Ct) were implanted adjacent to 4T1 cell-induced tumors in two different xenograft mice models either as primary therapy or surgical adjuvant therapy of breast cancer. Non-treated mice and mice implanted with naive (non-radioactive) hydrogels served as control groups.In the primary therapy model, the progression rate of the tumor was delayed by two weeks compared with the non-treated and the naive-implant control animals, resulting in a one-week extension in the survival of the treated animals. In the adjuvant therapy model, for the treatment of minimal residual disease, 131I–NC–Ct implants were able to prevent 69% of tumor recurrence, and to prevent metastatic spread resulting in long-term survival, compared with 0% long-term survival of the non-treated and the naive control groups.Imaging of the hydrogel's in vivo elimination revealed a first order process with a half-life of 14 days. The degradation was caused by oxidation of the Ct as was assessed by in vitro H&E stain.Biodegradable radioactive implants are suggested as a novel platform for the delivery of brachytherapy. This radiotherapy regimen may prevent locoregional recurrence and metastatic spread after tumor resection.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
Authors
, , , , , , ,