Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.

HIFU has been shown to be a more suitable alternative for the treatment of primary solid tumors and metastatic diseases than other focal heat ablation techniques due to its noninvasive and extracorporeal nature. However, similar to other focal heat ablation techniques, HIFU is still in need of refin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Juan Li, Tianyi Krupka, Jinpeng Yao, Ronghui Wang, Lin Jiang, Yang Zhou, Guoqing Zuo, Zhibiao Wang, Lili Dai, Jianli Ren, Yuanyi Zheng, Dong Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4339192?pdf=render
id doaj-15f0fe7a39a24a0da1aa85cb21b37844
record_format Article
spelling doaj-15f0fe7a39a24a0da1aa85cb21b378442020-11-25T01:20:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01102e011735810.1371/journal.pone.0117358Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.Juan LiTianyi KrupkaJinpeng YaoRonghui WangLin JiangYang ZhouGuoqing ZuoZhibiao WangLili DaiJianli RenYuanyi ZhengDong WangHIFU has been shown to be a more suitable alternative for the treatment of primary solid tumors and metastatic diseases than other focal heat ablation techniques due to its noninvasive and extracorporeal nature. However, similar to other focal heat ablation techniques, HIFU is still in need of refinements due to tumor recurrence.In this work, we investigated the effectiveness of an adjunct treatment regimen using doxorubicin (DOX)-loaded, injectable, in situ-forming, and phase-inverting PLGA as the second line of defense after HIFU ablation to destroy detrimental residual tumors and to prevent tumor recurrence. All of the statistical analyses were performed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences 18.0 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL, USA), and p<0.05 was considered statistically significant. All of the results are presented as the means ± STDEV (standard deviation). For multiple comparisons, ANOVA (differences in tumor volumes, growth rates, apoptosis, proliferation indexes, and Bcl-2 and Bax protein levels) was used when the data were normally distributed with homogenous variance, and rank sum tests were used otherwise. Once significant differences were detected, Student-t tests were used for comparisons between two groups.Our results revealed that DOX diffused beyond the ablated tissue regions and entered tumor cells that were not affected by the HIFU ablation. Our results also show that HIFU in concert with DOX-loaded PLGA led to a significantly higher rate of tumor cell apoptosis and a lower rate of tumor cell proliferation in the areas beyond the HIFU-ablated tissues and consequently caused significant tumor volume shrinkage (tumor volumes:0.26±0.1,1.09±0.76, and 1.42±0.9 cm3 for treatment, sham, and no treatment control, respectively).From these results, we concluded that the intralesional injection of DOX-loaded PLGA after HIFU ablation is significantly more effective than HIFU alone for the treatment of solid tumors.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4339192?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Li
Tianyi Krupka
Jinpeng Yao
Ronghui Wang
Lin Jiang
Yang Zhou
Guoqing Zuo
Zhibiao Wang
Lili Dai
Jianli Ren
Yuanyi Zheng
Dong Wang
spellingShingle Juan Li
Tianyi Krupka
Jinpeng Yao
Ronghui Wang
Lin Jiang
Yang Zhou
Guoqing Zuo
Zhibiao Wang
Lili Dai
Jianli Ren
Yuanyi Zheng
Dong Wang
Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Juan Li
Tianyi Krupka
Jinpeng Yao
Ronghui Wang
Lin Jiang
Yang Zhou
Guoqing Zuo
Zhibiao Wang
Lili Dai
Jianli Ren
Yuanyi Zheng
Dong Wang
author_sort Juan Li
title Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.
title_short Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.
title_full Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.
title_fullStr Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.
title_full_unstemmed Liquid-solid phase-inversion PLGA implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after HIFU ablation.
title_sort liquid-solid phase-inversion plga implant for the treatment of residual tumor tissue after hifu ablation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description HIFU has been shown to be a more suitable alternative for the treatment of primary solid tumors and metastatic diseases than other focal heat ablation techniques due to its noninvasive and extracorporeal nature. However, similar to other focal heat ablation techniques, HIFU is still in need of refinements due to tumor recurrence.In this work, we investigated the effectiveness of an adjunct treatment regimen using doxorubicin (DOX)-loaded, injectable, in situ-forming, and phase-inverting PLGA as the second line of defense after HIFU ablation to destroy detrimental residual tumors and to prevent tumor recurrence. All of the statistical analyses were performed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences 18.0 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL, USA), and p<0.05 was considered statistically significant. All of the results are presented as the means ± STDEV (standard deviation). For multiple comparisons, ANOVA (differences in tumor volumes, growth rates, apoptosis, proliferation indexes, and Bcl-2 and Bax protein levels) was used when the data were normally distributed with homogenous variance, and rank sum tests were used otherwise. Once significant differences were detected, Student-t tests were used for comparisons between two groups.Our results revealed that DOX diffused beyond the ablated tissue regions and entered tumor cells that were not affected by the HIFU ablation. Our results also show that HIFU in concert with DOX-loaded PLGA led to a significantly higher rate of tumor cell apoptosis and a lower rate of tumor cell proliferation in the areas beyond the HIFU-ablated tissues and consequently caused significant tumor volume shrinkage (tumor volumes:0.26±0.1,1.09±0.76, and 1.42±0.9 cm3 for treatment, sham, and no treatment control, respectively).From these results, we concluded that the intralesional injection of DOX-loaded PLGA after HIFU ablation is significantly more effective than HIFU alone for the treatment of solid tumors.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4339192?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT juanli liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT tianyikrupka liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT jinpengyao liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT ronghuiwang liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT linjiang liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT yangzhou liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT guoqingzuo liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT zhibiaowang liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT lilidai liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT jianliren liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT yuanyizheng liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
AT dongwang liquidsolidphaseinversionplgaimplantforthetreatmentofresidualtumortissueafterhifuablation
_version_ 1725133081378029568