Homing and Detection of Unknown Primary Head-Neck Cancer by Acid-Sensing Nanoparticles

2025 0 citations

Abstract

<title>Abstract</title> Precise localization of cancer is essential for curative surgery but remains a major clinical challenge when tumors are small or anatomically concealed. While tumor-targeted imaging with nanomaterials has shown promise in preclinical models, mechanistic understanding and clinical translation in cancer patients remain limited. Here, in a prospective Phase 2 clinical trial (NCT05576974), we constructed a single-cell spatial atlas of Pegsitacianine, an acid-sensing nanoparticle with activation pH threshold of 5.3, in human squamous carcinoma of the head and neck. Mechanistically, Pegsitacianine preferentially accumulate in immune-infiltrative severely acidic milieus (iSAM) within tumor stromal regions adjacent to metabolically active cancer cells. Clinically, Pegsitacianine illuminated iSAM regions and achieved fluorescence-guided resection of tumors in 14 of 16 patients with unknown primary cancer, where conventional diagnostic tools failed to locate the tumor. These findings establish the mechanistic link between tumor metabolism, immune infiltration, and nanoparticle delivery, and underscore the clinical value of targeting severe tumor acidosis for cancer detection and therapy.

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2025
Type
article
Citations
0
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

0
OpenAlex

Cite This

Jinming Gao, Qiang Feng, Jun Chen et al. (2025). Homing and Detection of Unknown Primary Head-Neck Cancer by Acid-Sensing Nanoparticles. . https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-8253010/v1

Identifiers

DOI
10.21203/rs.3.rs-8253010/v1