We have developed a theranostic nanoparticle delivering the model radionuclide (177)Lu based on the versatile lipid-calcium-phosphate (LCP) nanoparticle delivery platform. Characterization of (177)Lu-LCP has shown that radionuclide loading can be increased by several orders of magnitude without affecting the encapsulation efficiency or the morphology of (177)Lu-LCP, allowing consistency during fabrication and overcoming scale-up barriers typical of nanotherapeutics. The choice of (177)Lu as a model radionuclide has allowed in vivo anticancer therapy in addition to radiographic imaging via the dual decay modes of (177)Lu. Tumor accumulation of (177)Lu-LCP was measured using both SPECT and Cerenkov imaging modalities in live mice, and treatment with just one dose of (177)Lu-LCP showed significant in vivo tumor inhibition in two subcutaneous xenograft tumor models. Microenvironment and cytotoxicity studies suggest that (177)Lu-LCP inhibits tumor growth by causing apoptotic cell death via double-stranded DNA breaks while causing a remodeling of the tumor microenvironment to a more disordered and less malignant phenotype.
Keywords: Cancer; High specific drug loading; Nanoparticle; Theranostic.
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