AI Article Synopsis

  • Current white light colonoscopy misses a significant number of preneoplastic lesions, with 22% to 32% going undetected, leading to interval malignancies occurring in 2% to 6% of patients between screenings.!* -
  • This study aims to improve detection rates by using colonoscopic fluorescence imaging with targeted fluorescent agents that enhance the visibility of lesions compared to normal tissue.!* -
  • The researchers developed Pluronic nanoparticles loaded with a fluorescent COX-2 inhibitor, which, when tested in mice with colonic adenomas, showed effective imaging due to focused delivery and retention of the fluorescent agent in tumors, demonstrating improved detection capabilities over traditional methods.!*

Article Abstract

Significance: Current white light colonoscopy suffers from many limitations that allow 22% to 32% of preneoplastic lesions to remain undetected. This high number of false negatives contributes to the appearance of interval malignancies, defined as neoplasms diagnosed between screening colonoscopies at a rate of 2% to 6%.

Aim: The shortcomings of today's white light-based colorectal cancer screening are addressed by colonoscopic fluorescence imaging of preneoplastic lesions using targeted fluorescent agents to enhance contrast between the lesion and the surrounding normal colonic epithelium.

Approach: We describe the development of Pluronic nanoparticles of fluorocoxib A (FA), a fluorescent cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor that enables targeted imaging of inflammation and cancer in numerous animal models, for endoscopic florescence imaging of colonic adenomas.

Results: We formulated FA, a fluorescent COX-2 inhibitor, or fluorocoxib negative control (FNC), a nontargeted fluorophore and a negative control for FA, in micellar nanoparticles of FDA approved Pluronic tri-block co-polymer using a bulk solvent evaporation method. This afforded FA-loaded micellar nanoparticles (FA-NPs) or FNC-loaded micellar nanoparticles (FNC-NPs) with the hydrodynamic diameters ( ) of and and the zeta potentials ( ) of and , respectively. We intravenously injected B6;129 mice bearing colonic adenomas induced by azoxymethane and dextran-sodium sulfate with FA-loaded Pluronic nanoparticles (FA-NPs). The diffusion-mediated local FA release and its binding to COX-2 enzyme allowed for clear detection of adenomas with high signal-to-noise ratios. The COX-2 targeted delivery and tumor retention were validated by negligible tumor fluorescence detected upon colonoscopic imaging of adenoma-bearing mice injected with Pluronic nanoparticles of FNC or of animals predosed with the COX-2 inhibitor, celecoxib, followed by intravenous dosing of FA-NPs.

Conclusions: These results demonstrate that the formulation of FA in Pluronic nanoparticles overcomes a significant hurdle to its clinical development for early detection of colorectal neoplasms by fluorescence endoscopy.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10118138PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.28.4.040501DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pluronic nanoparticles
16
cox-2 inhibitor
12
micellar nanoparticles
12
nanoparticles
8
nanoparticles fluorocoxib
8
fluorescence imaging
8
imaging colonic
8
colonic adenomas
8
preneoplastic lesions
8
negative control
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!