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  3. Catalytically Active Ti-Based Nanomaterials for Hydroxyl Radical Mediated Clinical X-Ray Enhancement.
 

Catalytically Active Ti-Based Nanomaterials for Hydroxyl Radical Mediated Clinical X-Ray Enhancement.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/77118
Date of Publication
December 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Radiation O...

Author
Gerken, Lukas R H
Beckers, Claire
Brugger, Beatrice A
Kissling, Vera M
Gogos, Alexander
Wee, Shianlin
Lukatskaya, Maria R
Schiefer, Hans
Plasswilm, Ludwig
Clinic of Radiation Oncology
Pruschy, Martin
Herrmann, Inge K
Series
Advanced Science
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2198-3844
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1002/advs.202406198
PubMed ID
39501581
Uncontrolled Keywords

photocatalyst

radiosensitization

radiotherapy

reactive oxygen speci...

titanium

Description
Nanoparticle radioenhancement offers a promising strategy for augmenting radiotherapy by locally increasing radiation damage to tumor tissue. While past research has predominantly focused on nanomaterials with high atomic numbers, such as Au and HfO2, recent work has revealed that their radioenhancement efficacy decreases considerably when using clinically relevant megavoltage X-rays as opposed to the orthovoltage X-rays typically employed in research settings. Here, radiocatalytically active Ti-based nanomaterials for clinical X-ray therapy settings are designed. A range of candidate materials, including TiO2 (optionally decorated with Ag or Pt nanoseeds), Ti-containing metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), and 2D Ti-based carbides known as Ti3C2Tx MXenes, is investigated. It is demonstrated that these titanium-based candidates remain consistently performant across a wide energy spectrum, from orthovoltage to megavoltage. This sustained performance is attributed to the catalytic generation of reactive oxygen species, moving beyond the simple physical dose enhancements associated with photoelectric effects. Beyond titania, emergent materials like titanium-based MOFs and MXenes exhibit encouraging results, achieving dose-enhancement factors of up to three in human soft tissue sarcoma cells. Notably, these enhancements are absent in healthy human fibroblast cells under similar conditions of particle uptake, underscoring the selective impact of titanium-based materials in augmenting radiotherapy across the clinically relevant spectral range.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/189692
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Advanced Science - 2024 - Gerken - Catalytically Active Ti‐Based Nanomaterials for Hydroxyl Radical Mediated Clinical X‐Ray.pdftextAdobe PDF12.19 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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