posted on 2020-04-02, 16:06authored byLijun Luo, Lesan Yan, Ahmad Amirshaghaghi, Yulong Wei, Tianyan You, Sunil Singhal, Andrew Tsourkas, Zhiliang Cheng
Recently,
near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent dyes such as indocyanine
green (ICG) have received tremendous interest as contrast agents for
use in fluorescence-guided, intraoperative cancer resection surgery.
However, despite showing great promise, ICG has many shortcomings
such as rapid clearance and poor tumor accumulation. To improve the
selective accumulation of ICG within tumors, numerous groups have
formulated ICG into nanoparticles, but these approaches can suffer
from rapid leakage of ICG, use of materials that exhibit poor or incomplete
excretion, or complex chemistries that are not easily amenable to
scale up for clinical use. Here, we developed a simple one-step method
to prepare ICG-based fluorescent micelles that are composed solely
of unmodified ICG and polycaprolactone (PCL), two clinically used
materials with well-characterized safety profiles. The ICG-PCL micelles
are prepared via oil-in-water emulsions, and the resulting micelles
exhibit a uniform size, good reproducibility, and high loading efficiency.
In vivo fluorescence imaging demonstrated that the ICG-PCL micelles
led to a significant improvement in the accumulation and retention
of ICG, in four different tumor models, compared with free dye, making
them an attractive option for image-guided surgery.