Houston: By loading magnetic nanoparticles with drugs and dressing them in
biochemical camouflage, Houston Methodist researchers say they can
destroy blood clots 100 to 1,000 times faster than a commonly used
clot-busting technique. The finding,reported in Advanced Functional Materials (early
online), is based on experiments in human blood and mouse clotting
models. If the drug delivery system performs similarly well in planned
human clinical trials, it could mean a major step forward in the
prevention of strokes, heart attacks, pulmonary embolisms, and other
dire circumstances where clots -- if not quickly busted -- can cause
severe tissue damage and death.
We have designed the nanoparticles so that they trap themselves at
the site of the clot, which means they can quickly deliver a burst of
the commonly used clot-busting drug tPA where it is most needed," said
Paolo Decuzzi, Ph.D., the study's co-principal investigator.
Decuzzi leads the Houston Methodist Research Institute Dept. of Translational Imaging.
Decuzzi's group coated iron oxide nanoparticles in albumin, a protein
found naturally in blood. The albumin provides a sort of camouflage,
giving the loaded nanoparticles time to reach their blood clot target
before the body's immune system recognizes the nanoparticles as invaders
and attacks them. Iron oxide was chosen for the core because the
researchers plan to use them for magnetic resonance imaging, remote
guidance with external magnetic fields, and for further accelerating
clot dissolution with localized magnetic heating.
The clot-busting drug loaded into the nanoparticles is tPA, tissue
plasminogen activator, an enzyme that is also found naturally in blood
at low concentrations. Typically, a small volume of concentrated tPA is
injected into a stroke patient’s blood upstream of a confirmed or
suspected clot. From there, some of the tPA reaches the clot, but much
of it may cruise past or around the clot, potentially ending up anywhere
in the circulatory system. tPA is typically used in emergency scenarios
by health care staff, but it can be dangerous to patients who are prone
to hemorrhage.
Treating clots is a serious problem for all hospitals, and we take
them very seriously as surgeons," said cardiovascular surgeon and
coauthor Alan Lumsden, M.D. "Although tPA and similar drugs can be very
effective in rescuing our patients, the drug is broken down quickly in
the blood, meaning we have to use more of it to achieve an effective
clinical dose. Yet using more of the drug creates its own problems,
increasing the risk of hemorrhage. If hemorrhage happens in the brain,
it could be fatal."
Lumsden, who is medical director of the Houston Methodist DeBakey
Heart & Vascular Center, said the nanoparticles being developed in
Decuzzi's lab could solve both problems.
"The nanoparticle protects the drug from the body's defenses, giving
the tPA time to work," he said. "But it also allows us to use less tPA,
which could make hemorrhage less likely. We are excited to see if the
technique works as phenomenally well for our patients as what we saw in
these experiments."
Decuzzi, Lumsden, and colleagues tested the effectiveness of tPA-loaded nanoparticles, using
human tissue cultures to see where tPA landed and how long it took for
the tPA to destroy fibrin-rich clots. In a series of in vivo
experiments, the researchers introduced blood clots to a mouse model,
injecting tPA-loaded nanoparticles into the bloodstream and using
optical microscopy to follow the dissolution of the clots. In comparison
to a control, the clots were destroyed about 100 times faster.
Although free tPA is usually injected at room temperature, a number
of studies suggest tPA is most effective at higher temperatures (40 C or
about 104 F). The same seems to be true for tPA delivered via Decuzzi's
iron oxide nanoparticles. By exposing the iron oxide nanoparticles to
external, alternating magnetic fields, the researchers created friction
and heat. Warmer tPA (42 C or about 108 F) was released faster and
increased another 10 times (to 1,000) the rate of clot dissolution.
"We think it is possible to use a static magnetic field first to help
guide the nanoparticles to the clot, then alternate the orientation of
the field to increase the nanoparticles' efficiency in dissolving
clots," Decuzzi said. Coauthor and Vascular Ultrasound Lab Medical
Director Zsolt Garami, M.D., added, "By heating the clot, tPA worked
better."
Next steps in the research, Decuzzi said, will be testing the
nanoparticles' safety and effectiveness in other animal models, with the
ultimate goal of human clinical trials. Decuzzi said his group will
continue to examine the feasibility of using magnetic fields to guide
and heat the nanoparticles.
"We are optimistic because the FDA has already approved the use of
iron oxide as a contrast agent in MRIs," Decuzzi said. "And we do not
anticipate needing to use as much of the iron oxide at concentrations
higher than what's already been approved. The other chemical aspects of
the nanoparticles are natural substances you already find in the
bloodstream."
The paper by Decuzzi, Lumsden, and colleagues is the first produced
under the auspices of the new George and Angelina Kostas Research Center
for Cardiovascular Nanomedicine, established at the Houston Methodist
Research Institute last year.
Also contributing to the Advanced Functional Materials paper
were University of Pécs fellow Eszter Voros (first author) and Houston
Methodist researchers Minjung Cho, Maricela Ramirez, Enrica De Rosa, and
Jaehong Key. Work was funded by the George and Angelina Kostas Research
Center for Cardiovascular Nanomedicine at the Houston Methodist
Research Institute, which founded last year. The paper is the first
produced by scientists affiliated with the new center.
The journal Advanced Functional Materials' 2014 impact factor is 10.4, as assessed by the Institute for Scientific Information.