Ultrasound-mediated Cavitation-enhanced extravasation of mesoporous silica nanoparticles for controlled-release drug delivery
JL Paris, C Mannris, M Cabanas, R Calisle, M Manzano, M Vallet-Regi,, CC Coussios

TL;DR
This study explores using ultrasound-induced cavitation to enhance the delivery of mesoporous silica nanoparticles into tissues, aiming to improve targeted drug delivery and controlled release in cancer therapy.
Contribution
It demonstrates that combining silica nanoparticles with cavitation nuclei significantly improves extravasation efficiency at lower ultrasound pressures.
Findings
Ultrasound cavitation promotes nanoparticle extravasation.
Cavitation nuclei reduce required ultrasound pressure.
Enhanced tissue penetration of nanoparticles.
Abstract
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles have been reported as suitable drug carriers, but their successful delivery to target tissues following systemic administration remains a challenge. In the present work, ultrasound-induced inertial cavitation was evaluated as a mechanism to promote their extravasation in a flow-through tissue-mimicking agarose phantom. Two different ultrasound frequencies, 0.5 or 1.6 MHz, with pressures in the range 0.5-4 MPa were used to drive cavitation activity which was detected in real time. The optimal ultrasound conditions identified were employed to deliver dye-loaded nanoparticles as a model for drug-loaded nanocarriers, with the level of extravasation evaluated by fluorescence microscopy. The same nanoparticles were then co-injected with submicrometric polymeric cavitation nuclei as a means to promote cavitation activity and decrease the required in-situ…
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