Catheter‐Directed Ionic Liquid Embolic Agent for Rapid Portal Vein Embolization, Segmentectomy, and Bile Duct Ablation

Author:

Cevik Enes1,Albadawi Hassan1,Zhang Zefu1,Demirlenk Yusuf1,Atar Dila1,Keum Chris1,Kim Jinjoo1,Graf Erin2,Gunduz Seyda3,Rehman Suliman1,Oklu Rahmi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Vascular & Interventional Radiology Laboratory for Patient Inspired Engineering Mayo Clinic 13400 East Shea Blvd Scottsdale AZ 85259 USA

2. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology Mayo Clinic 5777 E Mayo Blvd Phoenix AZ 85054 USA

3. Department of Medical Oncology Istinye University Bahcesehir Liv Hospital Istanbul 34517 Turkey

Abstract

AbstractEmbolic materials currently in use for portal vein embolization (PVE) do not treat the tumor, which poses a risk for tumor progression during the interval between PVE and surgical resection. Here, is developed an ionic‐liquid‐based embolic material (LEAD) for portal vein embolization, liver ablation, and drug delivery. LEAD is optimized and characterized for diffusivity, X‐ray visibility, and cytotoxicity. In the porcine renal embolization model, LEAD delivered from the main renal artery reached vasculature down to 10 microns with uniform tissue ablation and delivery of small and large therapeutics. In non‐survival and survival porcine experiments, successful PVE is achieved in minutes, leading to the expected chemical segmentectomy, and delivery of a large protein drug (i.e., Nivolumab) with LEAD. In cholangiocarcinoma mouse tumor models and in ex vivo human tumors, LEAD consistently achieved an effective ablation and wide drug distribution. Furthermore, various strains of drug‐resistant patient‐derived bacteria showed significant susceptibility to LEAD, suggesting that LEAD may also prevent infectious complications resulting from tissue ablation. With its capabilities to embolize, ablate, and deliver therapeutics, ease of use, and a high safety profile demonstrated in animal studies, LEAD offers a potential alternative to tumor ablation with or without PVE for FLR growth.

Funder

Mayo Clinic

National Cancer Institute

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Publisher

Wiley

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