Issue 43, 2022

Optomagnetic nanofluids for controlled brain hyperthermia: a critical study

Abstract

Optomagnetic nanofluids (OMNFs) are colloidal dispersions of nanoparticles (NPs) with combined magnetic and optical properties. They are especially appealing in biomedicine since they can be used as minimally invasive platforms for controlled hyperthermia treatment of otherwise difficultly accessible tumors such as intracranial ones. On the one hand, magnetic NPs act as heating mediators when subjected to alternating magnetic fields or light irradiation. On the other hand, suitably tailored luminescent NPs can provide a precise and remote thermal readout in real time. The combination of heating and thermometric properties allows, in principle, to precisely monitor the increase in the temperature of brain tumors up to the therapeutic level, without causing undesired collateral damage. In this work we demonstrate that this view is an oversimplification since it ignores the presence of relevant interactions between magnetic (γ-Fe2O3 nanoflowers) and luminescent nanoparticles (Ag2S NPs) that result in a detrimental alteration of their physicochemical properties. The magnitude of such interactions depends on the interparticle distance and on the surface properties of nanoparticles. Experiments performed in mouse brains (phantoms and ex vivo) revealed that OMNFs cannot induce relevant heating under alternating magnetic fields and fail to provide reliable temperature reading. In contrast, we demonstrate that the use of luminescent nanofluids (containing only Ag2S NPs acting as both photothermal agents and nanothermometers) stands out as a better alternative for thermally monitored hyperthermia treatment of brain tumors in small animal models.

Graphical abstract: Optomagnetic nanofluids for controlled brain hyperthermia: a critical study

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Jun 2022
Accepted
16 Oct 2022
First published
17 Oct 2022

Nanoscale, 2022,14, 16208-16219

Optomagnetic nanofluids for controlled brain hyperthermia: a critical study

D. Mendez-Gonzalez, J. Lifante, I. Zabala Gutierrez, R. Marin, E. Ximendes, E. Sanz-de Diego, M. C. Iglesias-de la Cruz, F. J. Teran, J. Rubio-Retama and D. Jaque, Nanoscale, 2022, 14, 16208 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR03413A

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