MPI can also be implemented for in vivo drug release monitoring to guide drug
dosing on the desired location. This approach will enable the physicians to track drug
doses along with real-time adjustments of doses in order to keep them within
permissible limit. Basically, the integration of MPI with drug delivery will aid in
visualization and quantitative spatial distribution of drug in the human system. The
similar strategy was adopted by Zhu et al. for the monitoring of doxorubicin drug
release in a murine breast cancer model. For this purpose, doxorubicin, a chemo-
therapy drug, was loaded on core-shell superparamagnetic Fe3O4 nanocluster@ poly
(lactide-co-glycolide acid) (Fe3O4@PLGA) nanocomposite which can be degraded
under mild acidic conditions, thereby releasing the doxorubicin. After the release of
the drug, Fe3O4 core disassembles allowing the quantification of the drug via MPI.
Employment of MNPs aids in significant enhancement of MPI signals as presented
in Fig. 24.3 (Zhu et al. 2019).
MPI has been extensively explored in the blood pool imaging as MPI detects only
the superparamagnetic moiety in the blood and the surrounding tissues which do not
possess MNPs do not contribute any signal in MPI. Thus, MPI generates images that
assist in distinguishing blood and the surrounding tissue. Khandhar et al. developed
a MPI tracer LS-008 based on the coating of polyethylene glycol (PEG) onto the
Fig. 24.3 Schematic representation for drug release using Fe3O4@PLGA and its MPI-based
monitoring in tumor-bearing mice. MPI signal intensity within the tumor gradually increased
with time after injection of drug-loaded Fe3O4@PLGA into mice. (Reproduced with permission
from Zhu et al. (2019))
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