Summary:
-- Tiny luminescent crystals called quantum dots hold great
promise as tools for treating and detecting diseases like
cancer.
-- A pioneering study to gauge the toxicity of quantum dots in
primates has found cadmium-selenide quantum dots to be safe over
intervals of time ranging from three months to a year. The study is
likely the first to test the safety of quantum dots in
primates.
-- The authors say more research is needed to determine quantum
dots' long-term effect on health; elevated levels of cadmium from
the quantum dots were found in the primates even after 90 days.
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- A pioneering study to gauge the toxicity of
quantum dots in primates has found the tiny crystals to be safe
over a one-year period, a hopeful outcome for doctors and
scientists seeking new ways to battle diseases like cancer through
nanomedicine.
The research, which appeared on May 20 in Nature
Nanotechnology online, is likely the first to test the safety
of quantum dots in primates.
In the study, scientists found that four rhesus monkeys injected
with cadmium-selenide quantum dots remained in normal health over
90 days. Blood and biochemical markers stayed in typical ranges,
and major organs developed no abnormalities. The animals didn't
lose weight.
Two monkeys observed for an additional year also showed no signs
of illness.
Quantum dots are tiny luminescent crystals that glow brightly in
different colors. Medical researchers are eyeing the crystals for
use in image-guided surgery, light-activated therapies and
sensitive diagnostic tests. Cadmium selenide quantum dots are among
the most studied, with potential applications not only in medicine,
but as components of solar cells, quantum computers, light-emitting
diodes and more.
The new toxicity study -- completed by the University at
Buffalo, the Chinese PLA General Hospital, China's ChangChun
University of Science and Technology, and Singapore's Nanyang
Technological University -- begins to address the concern of health
professionals who worry that quantum dots may be dangerous to
humans.
The authors caution, however, that more research is needed to
determine the nanocrystals' long-term effects in primates; most of
the potentially toxic cadmium from the quantum dots stayed in the
liver, spleen and kidneys of the animals studied over the 90-day
period.
"This is the first study that uses primates as animal models for
in vivo studies with quantum dots," said paper coauthor Paras
Prasad, UB professor of chemistry and medicine, and executive
director of UB's Institute for Lasers, Photonics and Biophotonics
(ILPB). "So far, such toxicity studies have focused only on mice
and rats, but humans are very different from mice. More studies
using animal models that are closer to humans are necessary."
The cadmium build-up, in particular, is a serious concern that
warrants further investigation, said Ken-Tye Yong, a Nanyang
Technological University assistant professor who began working with
Prasad on the study as a postdoctoral researcher at UB.
Because of that concern, the best in-vivo applications for
cadmium-selenide quantum dots in medicine may be the ones that use
the crystals in a limited capacity, said Mark Swihart, a third
coauthor and a UB professor of chemical and biological engineering.
Image-guided surgery, which could involve a single dose of quantum
dots to identify a tumor or other target area, falls into this
category.
The new toxicity study was supported by the John R. Oishei
Foundation, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Singapore
Ministry of Education, Nanyang Technological University, the
Beijing Natural Science Foundation and the National Natural Science
Foundation of China. The study's lead authors were Ling Ye of
Chinese PLA General Hospital and Yong of Nanyang Technological
University, who completed his PhD in chemical and biological
engineering at UB in 2006.