Zhi-Fei Dai
Department of Biomedical Engineering, College of Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
GUEST EDITOR′S PREFACE
Nanomedicine has opened new avenues for cancer diagnosis and therapy
Zhi-Fei Dai
Department of Biomedical Engineering, College of Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
Professor Zhi-Fei Dai obtained his Ph.D. degree at Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. He is now a professor at Biomedical Engineering Department, Peking University. His research is focused on contrast agent, nanomedicine and molecular imaging. He is a chief scientist for National Key Research and Development Program of China. He works as a member of editorial board for several international and national journals such as Bioconjugate Chemistry, Theranostics,Journal of Interdisciplinary Nanomedicine, IET Nanobiotechnology, Chinese Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging and so on. He is now serving as a vice chairman in Chinese Society of Biomedical Engineering in Photonics, a standing committee member in Ultrasound Molecular Imaging, Chinese Association of Ultrasound in Medicine and Engineering, an executive member of the council in Chinese Society for Functional Materials, and a committee member in the Biomedical Engineering in Ultrasonics, the Acoustic Society of China. He received honors and awards including National Natural Science Foundation for Outstanding Young Researcher, New Century Talents by Chinese Ministry of Education, Longjiang Scholarship Distinguished Professor, and the First Prize for Natural Sciences in Heilongjiang Province.
A crucial feature of nanoparticles, such as liposomes,magnetic nanoparticles, quantum dots, metallic nanoparticles, silica nanoparticles, polymersomes and dendrimers etc., is their higher accumulation in the tumor than in normal tissues1-3. Various nanoparticles have been intensively used as vehicles to deliver chemotherapeutic drugs, genes, photodynamic and photothermal agents for the improvement of their therapeutic efficacy, or as molecular imaging agents to detect and monitor cancer progression because of their excellent electronic, magnetic, optical and structural characteristics4,5.
Nanomedicine can provide powerful tools to assess in vivo drug biodistribution, to non-invasively visualize the drug release from a given nanoparticle, and to predict and monitor therapeutic outcome in real-time6. Therefore, cancer nanomedicine has attracted wide attention from both public and private research institutes and enterpreneurs.
Nowadays, efficacious cancer therapy is still problematic. Nanomedicine is developing very fast with remarkable achievements, fostering a new avenue for cancer diagnosis and therapy7. Before translating these nanomedicines into clinical trials, we should optimize them by starting with small-animal models and scaling up to nonhuman primate models, which has a pressing need for a solid foundation for the long-term advancement.
This special issue includes four review articles and one original research article. The review articles survey the recent advances and basic principles of nanomedicine with a particular emphasis on the design and construction of various multifunctional nanoparticles for cancer imaging (diagnosis),therapy and theranostics. The research article reports the near-infrared dye-loaded magnetic nanoparticles as photoacoustic contrast agent for enhanced tumor imaging.
It is hoped that this special issue on "Cancer Nanomedicine" will be interesting for readers who want to increase their familiarity with the exciting new development in nanomedicine. Each paper was written by well-recognized experts in the field of nanomedicine. I would like to appreciate the authors for their wonderful contributions and brilliant efforts which have conduced to this superb special issue. I would also like to express my thanks to Professor Ning Zhang at Tianjin Medical University and Professor. Xi-Shan Hao who is Editor-in-Chief of Cancer Biology & Medicine for their support and giving me a wonderful opportunity to organize this special issue.
No potential conflicts of interest are disclosed.
1.Ke H, Wang J, Dai Z, Jin Y, Qu E, Xing Z, et al. Gold nanoshelled microcapsules: a theranostic agent for ultrasound contrast imaging and photothermal therapy. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2011; 50: 3017-21.
2.Ma Y, Liang X, Tong S, Bao G, Ren Q, Dai Z, et al. Gold nanoshelled nanomicelles for potential MRI imaging, light-triggered drug release and photothermal therapy. Adv Funct Mater. 2013; 23: 815-22.
3.Zha Z, Yue X, Ren Q, Dai Z. Uniform polypyrrole nanoparticles with high photothermal conversion efficiency for photothermal ablation of cancer cells. Adv Mater. 2013; 25: 777-82.
4.Liang X, Yue X, Li X, Dai Z. Conjugation of porphyrin to nanohybrid cerasomes for photodynamic therapy of cancer. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2011; 50: 11622-7.
5.Liang X, Gao J, Jiang L, Luo J, Jing L, Li X, et al. Nanohybrid liposomal cerasomes with good physiological stability and rapid temperature responsiveness for HIFU triggered local chemotherapy of cancer. ACS Nano. 2015; 9: 1280-93.
6.Kircher MF, de la Zerda A, Jokerst JV, Zavaleta CL, Kempen PJ,Mittra E, et al. A brain tumor molecular imaging strategy using a new triple-modality MRI-photoacoustic-Raman nanoparticle. Nat Med. 2012; 18: 829-34.
7.Wang Y, Zhou K, Huang G, Hensley C, Huang X, Ma X, et al. A broad nanoparticle-based strategy for tumor imaging by nonlinear amplification of microenvironment signals. Nat Mater. 2014; 13: 204-12.
Cite this article as: Dai ZF. Nanomedicine has opened new avenues for cancer diagnosis and therapy. Cancer Biol Med. 2016; 13: 297-8. doi: 10.20892/j.issn.2095-3941.2016.0069
Correspondence to: Zhi-Fei Dai
E-mail: zhifei.dai@pku.edu.cn
September 6, 2016; accepted September 9, 2016. Available at www.cancerbiomed.org
Copyright ? 2016 by Cancer Biology & Medicine
Cancer Biology & Medicine2016年3期