Molecular imaging and disease theranostics with renal-clearable optical agents

2021 
Optical imaging in disease diagnosis and treatment benefits from high spatiotemporal resolution and the availability of numerous optical agents. However, many optical imaging probes are cleared by the reticuloendothelial system, which can lead to probe accumulation in the liver and spleen and hence organ toxicity. By contrast, renal-clearable optical agents (RCOAs) are rapidly excreted from the body via the kidneys, undergoing minimal metabolism. In this Review, we discuss the design principles of RCOAs, with a focus on imaging and disease theranostics (the combination of diagnosis and therapy). Renal excretion of RCOAs makes them intrinsically suitable for targeted kidney imaging, including passive monitoring of the glomerular filtration rate and detection of early kidney injury biomarkers. The pharmacokinetics of RCOAs can further be tailored to prolong their circulation in the blood, allowing deep tumour penetration and high-contrast tumour imaging. Finally, we discuss intraoperative image-guided surgery and optical urinalysis, and suggest future applications of RCOAs. Intravenously injected renal-clearable optical agents (RCOAs) are rapidly cleared by the kidneys, allowing disease diagnosis and treatment by optical imaging, while avoiding unwanted tissue accumulation and adverse effects. This Review discusses the design of RCOAs for kidney imaging, kidney injury detection, cancer theranostics, intraoperative image-guided surgery and optical urinalysis.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    161
    References
    14
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []