Publications by authors named "Sigrid Berg"

: To examine the regulatory role of PCNA in MM, we have targeted PCNA with the experimental drug ATX-101 in three commercial cell lines (JJN3, RPMI 1660, AMO) and seven in-house patient-derived cell lines with a more primary cell-like phenotype (TK9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18) and measured the systemic molecular effects. : We have used a multi-omics untargeted approach, measuring the gene expression (transcriptomics), a subproteomics approach measuring mainly signalling proteins and proteins in complex with these (signallomics) and quantitative metabolomics. These results are supplemented with traditional analysis, e.

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  • * Researchers used a dual-frequency ultrasound method to evaluate liver fat in 24 Wistar rats, comparing those on a high-fat diet to a control group over different time periods.
  • * Results showed that the ultrasound technique provided a strong correlation between measured fat content and actual liver fat levels, indicating its potential for clinical use in diagnosing fatty liver disease.
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Objective: Ultrasound in combination with microbubbles can enhance accumulation and improve the distribution of various therapeutic agents in tumor tissue, leading to improved efficacy. Understanding the impact of treatment on the tumor microenvironment, concurrently with how microenvironment attributes affect treatment outcome, will be important for selecting appropriate patient cohorts in future clinical trials. The main aim of this work was to investigate the influence of ultrasound and microbubbles on the functional vasculature of cancer tissue.

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Objective: This paper describes the relationship between elastic tissue properties and strain and presents an initial investigation of pulse-echo ultrasound to measure two uncorrelated elastic parameters in tissue-mimicking phantoms. The two elastic parameters are the shear modulus, related to deformation of shape, and what we in the paper define as the nonlinear compressibility, related to deformation of volume.

Methods: We prepared tissue-mimicking phantoms containing lesions of variable shear modulus and variable nonlinear compressibility.

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Objective: Ultrasound-triggered bubble-mediated local drug delivery has shown potential to increase therapeutic efficacy and reduce systemic side effects, by loading drugs into the microbubble shell and triggering delivery of the payload on demand using ultrasound. Understanding the behavior of the microbubbles in response to ultrasound is crucial for efficient and controlled release.

Methods: In this work, the response of microbubbles with a coating consisting of poly(2-ethyl-butyl cyanoacrylate) (PEBCA) nanoparticles and denatured casein was characterized.

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Objective: Currently available cytotoxic treatments have limited effect on pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) because desmoplastic stroma limits drug delivery. Efforts have been made to overcome these barriers by drug targeting the tumor microenvironment. Results so far are promising, but without clinical impact.

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Contrast enhanced ultrasound is a powerful diagnostic tool and ultrasound contrast media are based on microbubbles (MBs). The use of MBs in drug delivery applications and molecular imaging is a relatively new field of research which has gained significant interest during the last decade. MBs available for clinical use are fragile with short circulation half-lives due to the use of a thin encapsulating shell for stabilization of the gas core.

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The aim of this study was to develop high load-capacity antibubbles that can be visualized using diagnostic ultrasound and the encapsulated drug can be released and delivered using clinically translatable ultrasound. The antibubbles were developed by optimising a silica nanoparticle stabilised double emulsion template. We produced an emulsion with a mean size diameter of 4.

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Microbubble contrast agents hold great promise for drug delivery applications with ultrasound. Encapsulating drugs in nanoparticles reduces systemic toxicity and increases circulation time of the drugs. In a novel approach to microbubble-assisted drug delivery, nanoparticles are incorporated in or on microbubble shells, enabling local and triggered release of the nanoparticle payload with ultrasound.

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Delivery of drugs and nanomedicines to tumors is often heterogeneous and insufficient and, thus, of limited efficacy. Microbubbles in combination with ultrasound have been found to improve delivery to tumors, enhancing accumulation and penetration. We used a subcutaneous prostate cancer xenograft model in mice to investigate the effect of free and nanoparticle-encapsulated cabazitaxel in combination with ultrasound and microbubbles with a lipid shell or a shell of nanoparticles.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ultrasound combined with microbubbles shows potential for better chemotherapy delivery, but most research is done on immune-compromised mice with implanted tumors.
  • In a study using an advanced mouse prostate cancer model (TRAMP), cabazitaxel (Cab) was tested both as a free drug and in nanoparticles, leading to temporary reductions in tumor size.
  • However, combining Cab with ultrasound and microbubbles did not show significant improvements in treatment outcomes, and differences in treatment effects were not observed through histological analyses.
  • Additionally, nanoparticle formulation improved Cab's circulation time and accumulation in organs like the liver and spleen compared to the free drug, illustrating the complexities of translating results from xenograft studies to spontaneous tumor models.
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To improve therapeutic efficacy of nanocarrier drug delivery systems, it is essential to improve their uptake and penetration in tumour tissue, enhance cellular uptake and ensure efficient drug release at the tumour site. Here we introduce a tumour targeting drug delivery system based on the ultrasound-mediated delivery of enzyme sensitive liposomes. These enzyme sensitive liposomes are coated with cleavable poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) which will be cleaved by two members of the enzyme matrix metalloproteinase family (MMP-2 and MMP-9).

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Ultrasound and microbubbles have been found to improve the delivery of drugs and nanoparticles to tumor tissue. To obtain new knowledge on the influence of vascular parameters on extravasation and to elucidate the effect of acoustic pressure on extravasation and penetration of nanoscale particles into the extracellular matrix, real-time intravital multiphoton microscopy was performed during sonication of tumors growing in dorsal window chambers. The impact of vessel diameter, vessel structure and blood flow was characterized.

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The treatment of brain diseases is hindered by the blood-brain barrier (BBB) preventing most drugs from entering the brain. Focused ultrasound (FUS) with microbubbles can open the BBB safely and reversibly. Systemic drug injection might induce toxicity, but encapsulation into nanoparticles reduces accumulation in normal tissue.

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Compared with conventional chemotherapy, encapsulation of drugs in nanoparticles can improve efficacy and reduce toxicity. However, delivery of nanoparticles is often insufficient and heterogeneous because of various biological barriers and uneven tumor perfusion. We investigated a unique multifunctional drug delivery system consisting of microbubbles stabilized by polymeric nanoparticles (NPMBs), enabling ultrasound-mediated drug delivery.

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) constitutes a significant obstacle for the delivery of drugs into the central nervous system (CNS). Nanoparticles have been able to partly overcome this obstacle and can thus improve drug delivery across the BBB. Furthermore, focused ultrasound in combination with gas filled microbubbles has opened the BBB in a temporospatial manner in animal models, thus facilitating drug delivery across the BBB.

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Microbubbles (MBs) are routinely used as contrast agents for ultrasound imaging. The use of ultrasound in combination with MBs has also attracted attention as a method to enhance drug delivery. We have developed a technology platform incorporating multiple functionalities, including imaging and therapy in a single system consisting of MBs stabilized by polyethylene glycol (PEG)-coated polymeric nanoparticles (NPs).

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The delivery of nanoparticles to solid tumors is often ineffective due to the lack of specificity towards tumor tissue, limited transportation of the nanoparticles across the vascular wall and poor penetration through the extracellular matrix of the tumor. Ultrasound is a promising tool that can potentially improve several of the transportation steps, and the interaction between sound waves and microbubbles generates biological effects that can be beneficial for the successful delivery of nanocarriers and their contents. In this study, a novel platform consisting of nanoparticle-stabilized microbubbles has been investigated for its potential for ultrasound-enhanced delivery to tumor xenografts.

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Capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducers (CMUTs) have shown promising qualities for medical imaging. However, there are still some problems to be investigated, and some challenges to overcome. Acoustic backing is necessary to prevent SAWs excited in the surface of the silicon substrate from affecting the transmit pattern from the array.

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Lymphomatoid granulomatosis is a rare lymphoproliferative disorder involving the lungs, skin and other organs. Advanced-stage disease does not tend to respond well to cytotoxic chemotherapy and is associated with a poor prognosis. We present a case of successful treatment of relapsed lymphomatoid granulomatosis with bexarotene, a novel retinoid agent.

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Background: This study evaluated 3 new automated methods, based on a combination of speckle tracking and tissue Doppler, for the analysis of strain rate (SR) and strain. Feasibility and values for peak systolic strain rate (SR s ) and end-systolic strain (S es ) were assessed.

Methods: Thirty patients with myocardial infarction and 30 normal subjects were examined.

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