Fiche publication
Date publication
janvier 2025
Journal
Nanoscale advances
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr ROUX Stéphane
Tous les auteurs :
Salimi M, Wang W, Roux S, Laurent G, Bazzi R, Goodwill P, Liu G, Bulte JWM
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
One of the hallmark advantages of magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is the linear relationship between MPI signal and the concentration of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs), allowing absolute tracer quantification. However, intrinsic tissue matrix parameters may affect the MPI signal, often unknown , presenting a challenge for accurate MNP quantification in living subjects when using standard calibration curves obtained from simple aqueous MNP suspensions. We investigated the effects of matrix composition and temperature on the MPI signal amplitude and full width at half maximum (FWHM, metric for spatial resolution) for three different MNPs in gelatin and bovine serum albumin (BSA) phantoms and five different tissues. Decreasing matrix compressibility (increasing viscosity) led to decreased MPI signal amplitude and increased FWHM. For 8% w/v gelatin (compressibility = 3.5 × 10 m N, viscosity = 363.4 × 10 mPa s), the MPI signal amplitude of MNPs was ∼50% of that in aqueous solutions (compressibility = 8.4 × 10 m N, viscosity = 1 mPa s), while the FWHM increased by an average of 115%. For 5% w/v BSA samples (compressibility = 1.2 × 10 m N, viscosity = 198.6 × 10 mPa s), a 44% MPI signal reduction and 98 and 90% increase of FWHM was observed for gold-iron oxide nanoflowers and ferucarbotran, respectively, compared to water (0% w/v). MNPs injected in tissues also showed lower MPI signal amplitudes compared to aqueous solutions. Temperature also played a small role in MPI quantification, with the MPI signal amplitude of ferucarbotran decreasing by nearly 10% from 55 to 10 °C. The current results suggest that accurate MNP quantification will require reference/calibration samples with matching tissue matrix composition and temperature.
Référence
Nanoscale Adv. 2025 01 15;: