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Patrick Goodwill

Strategic Insight (United States)

ORCID: 0000-0003-4240-1956

Publishes on Characterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles, Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies, Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies. 136 papers and 7k citations.

136Publications
7kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Magnetic Particle Imaging-Guided Heating <i>in Vivo</i> Using Gradient Fields for Arbitrary Localization of Magnetic Hyperthermia Therapy
Cited by 440

Image-guided treatment of cancer enables physicians to localize and treat tumors with great precision. Here, we present in vivo results showing that an emerging imaging modality, magnetic particle imaging (MPI), can be combined with magnetic hyperthermia into an image-guided theranostic platform. MPI is a noninvasive 3D tomographic imaging method with high sensitivity and contrast, zero ionizing radiation, and is linearly quantitative at any depth with no view limitations. The same superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticle (SPIONs) tracers imaged in MPI can also be excited to generate heat for magnetic hyperthermia. In this study, we demonstrate a theranostic platform, with quantitative MPI image guidance for treatment planning and use of the MPI gradients for spatial localization of magnetic hyperthermia to arbitrarily selected regions. This addresses a key challenge of conventional magnetic hyperthermia-SPIONs delivered systemically accumulate in off-target organs ( e.g., liver and spleen), and difficulty in localizing hyperthermia results in collateral heat damage to these organs. Using a MPI magnetic hyperthermia workflow, we demonstrate image-guided spatial localization of hyperthermia to the tumor while minimizing collateral damage to the nearby liver (1-2 cm distance). Localization of thermal damage and therapy was validated with luciferase activity and histological assessment. Apart from localizing thermal therapy, the technique presented here can also be extended to localize actuation of drug release and other biomechanical-based therapies. With high contrast and high sensitivity imaging combined with precise control and localization of the actuated therapy, MPI is a powerful platform for magnetic-based theranostics.

The X-Space Formulation of the Magnetic Particle Imaging Process: 1-D Signal, Resolution, Bandwidth, SNR, SAR, and Magnetostimulation
Patrick Goodwill, Steven Conolly|IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging|2010
Cited by 386

The magnetic particle imaging (MPI) imaging process is a new method of medical imaging with great promise. In this paper we derive the 1-D MPI signal, resolution, bandwidth requirements, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), specific absorption rate, and slew rate limitations. We conclude with experimental data measuring the point spread function for commercially available SPIO nanoparticles and a demonstration of the principles behind 1-D imaging using a static offset field. Despite arising from the nonlinear temporal response of a magnetic nanoparticle to a changing magnetic field, the imaging process is linear in the magnetization distribution and can be described as a convolution. Reconstruction in one dimension is exact and has a well-behaved quasi-Lorentzian point spread function.The spatial resolution improves cubically with increasing diameter of the SPIO domain, inverse to absolute temperature, linearly with saturation magnetization, and inversely with gradient. The band width requirements approach a megahertz for reasonable imaging parameters and millimeter scale resolutions, and the SNR increases with the scanning rate. The limit to SNR as we scale MPI to human sizes will be patient heating. SAR and magnetostimulation limits give us surprising relations between optimal scanning speeds and scanning frequency for different types of scanners.

Magnetic Particle Imaging: A Novel in Vivo Imaging Platform for Cancer Detection
Elaine Yu, Mindy D. Bishop, Bo Zheng et al.|Nano Letters|2017
Cited by 371

Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Biomedical imaging plays a crucial role in all phases of cancer management. Physicians often need to choose the ideal diagnostic imaging modality for each clinical presentation based on complex trade-offs among spatial resolution, sensitivity, contrast, access, cost, and safety. Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is an emerging tracer imaging modality that detects superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) nanoparticle tracer with high image contrast (zero tissue background signal), high sensitivity (200 nM Fe) with linear quantitation, and zero signal depth attenuation. MPI is also safe in that it uses safe, in some cases even clinically approved, tracers and no ionizing radiation. The superb contrast, sensitivity, safety, and ability to image anywhere in the body lends MPI great promise for cancer imaging. In this study, we show for the first time the use of MPI for in vivo cancer imaging with systemic tracer administration. Here, long circulating MPI-tailored SPIOs were created and administered intravenously in tumor bearing rats. The tumor was highlighted with tumor-to-background ratio of up to 50. The nanoparticle dynamics in the tumor was also well-appreciated, with initial wash-in on the tumor rim, peak uptake at 6 h, and eventual clearance beyond 48 h. Lastly, we demonstrate the quantitative nature of MPI through compartmental fitting in vivo.

Quantitative Magnetic Particle Imaging Monitors the Transplantation, Biodistribution, and Clearance of Stem Cells <i>In Vivo</i>
Bo Zheng, Marc P. von See, Elaine Yu et al.|Theranostics|2015
Cited by 320Open Access

Stem cell therapies have enormous potential for treating many debilitating diseases, including heart failure, stroke and traumatic brain injury. For maximal efficacy, these therapies require targeted cell delivery to specific tissues followed by successful cell engraftment. However, targeted delivery remains an open challenge. As one example, it is common for intravenous deliveries of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to become entrapped in lung microvasculature instead of the target tissue. Hence, a robust, quantitative imaging method would be essential for developing efficacious cell therapies. Here we show that Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI), a novel technique that directly images iron-oxide nanoparticle-tagged cells, can longitudinally monitor and quantify MSC administration in vivo. MPI offers near-ideal image contrast, depth penetration, and robustness; these properties make MPI both ultra-sensitive and linearly quantitative. Here, we imaged, for the first time, the dynamic trafficking of intravenous MSC administrations using MPI. Our results indicate that labeled MSC injections are immediately entrapped in lung tissue and then clear to the liver within one day, whereas standard iron oxide particle (Resovist) injections are immediately taken up by liver and spleen. Longitudinal MPI-CT imaging also indicated a clearance half-life of MSC iron oxide labels in the liver at 4.6 days. Finally, our ex vivo MPI biodistribution measurements of iron in liver, spleen, heart, and lungs after injection showed excellent agreement (R(2) = 0.943) with measurements from induction coupled plasma spectrometry. These results demonstrate that MPI offers strong utility for noninvasively imaging and quantifying the systemic distribution of cell therapies and other therapeutic agents.