Gundersen Sharon I, Palmer Andre F
Dept. of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA.
Biotechnol Prog. 2008 Nov-Dec;24(6):1353-64. doi: 10.1002/btpr.56.
A tumor's low oxygen tension is a major obstacle to current chemo- and radio-therapies. By increasing oxygen transport to hypoxic tumor regions it is possible to make tumors more susceptible to current cancer treatment strategies. This article theoretically investigates the possibility of supplementing human blood with hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) in an attempt to target oxygen delivery specifically to the low oxygen tension regions present in tumors. In this work, we develop a mathematical model that describes oxygen transport in a cylindrical annulus of cancerous tissue fed by a single cylindrical capillary. The oxygen transport model was used to evaluate mixtures of red blood cells and six types of HBOCs that consisted of two polymerized hemoglobins, two liposome-encapsulated hemoglobins, and two hydrogel-encapsulated hemoglobins. These HBOCs span a wide range of oxygen affinities (P(50)s) ranging from 5 to 54 mm Hg to study the effect of P(50) on the ability to target oxygen delivery to hypoxic regions of a tumor and hence improve tumor oxygenation. The results of these simulations indicate that each HBOC has an effective pO(2) range in which it unloads the most oxygen, which is dependent on the HBOC's P(50). Although it would seem that the HBOC with the lowest P(50) (5 mm Hg) should be the best option for O(2) delivery to hypoxic tumors, our results indicate that when this is the case, the lowest P(50) HBOC yielded insufficient O(2) delivery to normoxic tissues (inlet pO(2) approximately 95 mm Hg). Because HBOCs would be transfused into a patient's blood stream before initiating a particular cancer therapy, sufficient oxygen must be delivered to both normoxic and cancerous tissues to maintain normal tissue functions when oxygenating the tumor. Human blood supplemented with a hydrogel-encapsulated Hb with a P(50) of 10 mm Hg was found to deliver sufficient oxygen to normoxic tissue while increasing oxygen delivery to hypoxic regions of tumorgenic tissue. Taken together, this work represents a novel strategy for enhancing the efficacy of existing cancer therapies.
肿瘤的低氧张力是当前化疗和放疗的主要障碍。通过增加向缺氧肿瘤区域的氧气输送,有可能使肿瘤对当前的癌症治疗策略更敏感。本文从理论上研究了用人血红蛋白基氧载体(HBOCs)补充人体血液,以试图将氧气特异性输送到肿瘤中存在的低氧张力区域的可能性。在这项工作中,我们开发了一个数学模型,该模型描述了由单个圆柱形毛细血管供血的癌组织圆柱形环中的氧气输送。氧气输送模型用于评估红细胞与六种类型的HBOCs的混合物,这六种HBOCs由两种聚合血红蛋白、两种脂质体包裹血红蛋白和两种水凝胶包裹血红蛋白组成。这些HBOCs的氧亲和力(P(50))范围很广,从5到54毫米汞柱,以研究P(50)对将氧气输送到肿瘤缺氧区域的能力的影响,从而改善肿瘤氧合。这些模拟结果表明,每种HBOC都有一个有效的pO(2)范围,在这个范围内它释放的氧气最多,这取决于HBOC的P(50)。虽然看起来P(50)最低(5毫米汞柱)的HBOC应该是向缺氧肿瘤输送氧气的最佳选择,但我们的结果表明,在这种情况下,P(50)最低的HBOC向正常氧合组织(入口pO(2)约为95毫米汞柱)输送的氧气不足。因为在开始特定的癌症治疗之前,HBOCs会被输入患者的血流中,所以在给肿瘤充氧时,必须向正常氧合组织和癌组织输送足够的氧气以维持正常的组织功能。发现用P(50)为10毫米汞柱的水凝胶包裹血红蛋白补充的人体血液,在增加向致瘤组织缺氧区域输送氧气的同时,能向正常氧合组织输送足够的氧气。综上所述,这项工作代表了一种提高现有癌症治疗疗效的新策略。