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Dive into the research topics where Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia is active.

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Featured researches published by Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia.


Nature Communications | 2016

In vivo covalent cross-linking of photon-converted rare-earth nanostructures for tumour localization and theranostics

Xiangzhao Ai; Chris Jun Hui Ho; Junxin Aw; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Jing Mu; Yu Wang; Xiaoyong Wang; Yong Wang; Xiaogang Liu; Huabing Chen; Mingyuan Gao; Xiaoyuan Chen; Edwin K. L. Yeow; Gang Liu; Malini Olivo; Bengang Xing

The development of precision nanomedicines to direct nanostructure-based reagents into tumour-targeted areas remains a critical challenge in clinics. Chemical reaction-mediated localization in response to tumour environmental perturbations offers promising opportunities for rational design of effective nano-theranostics. Here, we present a unique microenvironment-sensitive strategy for localization of peptide-premodified upconversion nanocrystals (UCNs) within tumour areas. Upon tumour-specific cathepsin protease reactions, the cleavage of peptides induces covalent cross-linking between the exposed cysteine and 2-cyanobenzothiazole on neighbouring particles, thus triggering the accumulation of UCNs into tumour site. Such enzyme-triggered cross-linking of UCNs leads to enhanced upconversion emission upon 808 nm laser irradiation, and in turn amplifies the singlet oxygen generation from the photosensitizers attached on UCNs. Importantly, this design enables remarkable tumour inhibition through either intratumoral UCNs injection or intravenous injection of nanoparticles modified with the targeting ligand. Our strategy may provide a multimodality solution for effective molecular sensing and site-specific tumour treatment.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Multifunctional photosensitizer-based contrast agents for photoacoustic imaging.

Chris Jun Hui Ho; Ghayathri Balasundaram; Wouter Driessen; Ross McLaren; Chi Lok Wong; U. S. Dinish; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Vasilis Ntziachristos; Malini Olivo

Photoacoustic imaging is a novel hybrid imaging modality combining the high spatial resolution of optical imaging with the high penetration depth of ultrasound imaging. Here, for the first time, we evaluate the efficacy of various photosensitizers that are widely used as photodynamic therapeutic (PDT) agents as photoacoustic contrast agents. Photoacoustic imaging of photosensitizers exhibits advantages over fluorescence imaging, which is prone to photobleaching and autofluorescence interference. In this work, we examined the photoacoustic activity of 5 photosensitizers: zinc phthalocyanine, protoporphyrin IX, 2,4-bis [4-(N,N-dibenzylamino)-2,6-dihydroxyphenyl] squaraine, chlorin e6 and methylene blue in phantoms, among which zinc phthalocyanine showed the highest photoacoustic activity. Subsequently, we evaluated its tumor localization efficiency and biodistribution at multiple time points in a murine model using photoacoustic imaging. We observed that the probe localized at the tumor within 10 minutes post injection, reaching peak accumulation around 1 hour and was cleared within 24 hours, thus, demonstrating the potential of photosensitizers as photoacoustic imaging contrast agents in vivo. This means that the known advantages of photosensitizers such as preferential tumor uptake and PDT efficacy can be combined with photoacoustic imaging capabilities to achieve longitudinal monitoring of cancer progression and therapy in vivo.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2016

Multispectral optoacoustic and MRI coregistration for molecular imaging of orthotopic model of human glioblastoma.

Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Chris Jun Hui Ho; Prashant Chandrasekharan; Ghayathri Balasundaram; Hui Chien Tay; Neal C. Burton; Kai-Hsiang Chuang; Vasilis Ntziachristos; Malini Olivo

Multi-modality imaging methods are of great importance in oncologic studies for acquiring complementary information, enhancing the efficacy in tumor detection and characterization. We hereby demonstrate a hybrid non-invasive in vivo imaging approach of utilizing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and Multispectral Optoacoustic Tomography (MSOT) for molecular imaging of glucose uptake in an orthotopic glioblastoma in mouse. The molecular and functional information from MSOT can be overlaid on MRI anatomy via image coregistration to provide insights into probe uptake in the brain, which is verified by ex vivo fluorescence imaging and histological validation. In vivo MSOT and MRI imaging of an orthotopic glioma mouse model injected with IRDye800-2DG. Image coregistration between MSOT and MRI enables multifaceted (anatomical, functional, molecular) information from MSOT to be overlaid on MRI anatomy images to derive tumor physiological parameters such as perfusion, haemoglobin and oxygenation.


Photoacoustics | 2017

Noninvasive real-time characterization of non-melanoma skin cancers with handheld optoacoustic probes

Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Sai Yee Chuah; Daniel Razansky; Chris Jun Hui Ho; Pinky Malempati; U. S. Dinish; Renzhe Bi; Chit Yaw Fu; Steven J. Ford; Joyce Siong-See Lee; Melissa Wee Ping Tan; Malini Olivo; Steven Tien Guan Thng

Currently, imaging technologies that enable dermsurgeons to visualize non-melanoma skin cancers (NMSC) in vivo preoperatively are lacking, resulting in excessive or incomplete removal. Multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) is a volumetric imaging tool to differentiate tissue chromophores and exogenous contrast agents, based on differences in their spectral signatures and used for high-resolution imaging of functional and molecular contrast at centimeter scale depth. We performed MSOT imaging with two- and three-dimensional handheld scanners on 21 Asian patients with NMSC. The tumors and their oxygenation parameters could be distinguished from normal skin endogenously. The lesion dimensions and depths were extracted from the spectral melanin component with three-dimensional spatial resolution up to 80 μm. The intraclass correlation coefficient correlating tumor dimension measurements between MSOT and ex vivo histology of excised tumors, showed good correlation. Real-time 3D imaging was found to provide information on lesion morphology and its underlying neovasculature, indicators of the tumor’s aggressiveness.


Skin Research and Technology | 2017

Structural and functional 3D mapping of skin tumours with non-invasive multispectral optoacoustic tomography

Sai Yee Chuah; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; V. Long; Chris Jun Hui Ho; P. Malempati; Chit Yaw Fu; S. J. Ford; Joyce Siong-See Lee; W. P. Tan; Daniel Razansky; Malini Olivo; Steven Tien Guan Thng

Recent advances in technology have enabled the development of various non‐invasive skin imaging tools to aid real‐time diagnosis of both benign and malignant skin tumours, minimizing the need for invasive skin biopsy. Multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) is a recently developed non‐invasive imaging tool, which offers the unique capacity for high resolution three dimensional (3D) optical mapping of tissue by further delivering highly specific optical contrast from a depth of several millimetres to centimetres in living tissues. MSOT enables volumetric, spectroscopic differentiation of tissue, both in vivo and in real time, with and without the application of biomarker‐specific probes, and is further able of providing spatial maps of skin chromophores, as well as underlying blood vasculature.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2018

Multimodal imaging approach to monitor browning of adipose tissue in vivo

Xin Hui Derryn Chan; Ghayathri Balasundaram; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Julian L. Goggi; Boominathan Ramasamy; Weiping Han; Malini Olivo; Shigeki Sugii

The discovery that white adipocytes can undergo a browning process to become metabolically active beige cells has attracted significant interest in the fight against obesity. However, the study of adipose browning has been impeded by a lack of imaging tools that allow longitudinal and noninvasive monitoring of this process in vivo. Here, we report a preclinical imaging approach to detect development of beige adipocytes during adrenergic stimulation. In this approach, we expressed near-infrared fluorescent protein, iRFP720, driven under an uncoupling protein-1 (Ucp1) promoter in mice by viral transduction, and used multispectral optoacoustic imaging technology with ultrasound tomography (MSOT-US) to assess adipose beiging during adrenergic stimulation. We observed increased photoacoustic signal at 720 nm, coupled with attenuated lipid signals in stimulated animals. As a proof of concept, we validated our approach against hybrid positron emission tomography combined with magnetic resonance (PET/MR) imaging modality, and quantified the extent of adipose browning by MRI-guided segmentation of 2-deoxy-2-18F-fluoro-d-glucose uptake signals. The browning extent detected by MSOT-US and PET/MR are well correlated with Ucp1 induction. Taken together, these systems offer great opportunities for preclinical screening aimed at identifying compounds that promote adipose browning and translation of these discoveries into clinical studies of humans.


Translational Oncology | 2018

Noninvasive Anatomical and Functional Imaging of Orthotopic Glioblastoma Development and Therapy using Multispectral Optoacoustic Tomography

Ghayathri Balasundaram; Lu Ding; Xiuting Li; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Xosé Luís Deán-Ben; Chris Jun Hui Ho; Prashant Chandrasekharan; Hui Chien Tay; Hann Qian Lim; Chee Bing Ong; Ralph P. Mason; Daniel Razansky; Malini Olivo

PURPOSE: Here we demonstrate the potential of multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT), a new non-invasive structural and functional imaging modality, to track the growth and changes in blood oxygen saturation (sO2) in orthotopic glioblastoma (GBMs) and the surrounding brain tissues upon administration of a vascular disruptive agent (VDA). METHODS: Nude mice injected with U87MG tumor cells were longitudinally monitored for the development of orthotopic GBMs up to 15 days and observed for changes in sO2 upon administration of combretastatin A4 phosphate (CA4P, 30 mg/kg), an FDA approved VDA for treating solid tumors. We employed a newly-developed non-negative constrained approach for combined MSOT image reconstruction and unmixing in order to quantitatively map sO2 in whole mouse brains. RESULTS: Upon longitudinal monitoring, tumors could be detected in mouse brains using single-wavelength data as early as 6 days post tumor cell inoculation. Fifteen days post-inoculation, tumors had higher sO2 of 63 ± 11% (n = 5, P < .05) against 48 ± 7% in the corresponding contralateral brain, indicating their hyperoxic status. In a different set of animals, 42 days post-inoculation, tumors had lower sO2 of 42 ± 5% against 49 ± 4% (n = 3, P < .05) in the contralateral side, indicating their hypoxic status. Upon CA4P administration, sO2 in 15 days post-inoculation tumors dropped from 61 ± 9% to 36 ± 1% (n = 4, P < .01) within one hour, then reverted to pre CA4P treatment values (63 ± 6%) and remained constant until the last observation time point of 6 hours. CONCLUSION: With the help of advanced post processing algorithms, MSOT was capable of monitoring the tumor growth and assessing hemodynamic changes upon administration of VDAs in orthotopic GBMs.


Clinical Breast Cancer | 2018

Multispectral Optoacoustic Tomography in Assessment of Breast Tumor Margins During Breast-Conserving Surgery: A First-in-human Case Study

Yonggeng Goh; Ghayathri Balasundaram; Mohesh Moothanchery; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Xiuting Li; Hann Qian Lim; Neal C. Burton; Yi Qiu; Thomas Choudary Putti; Ching Wan Chan; Philip Iau; Siau Wei Tang; Celene Wei Qi Ng; Felicity Jane Pool; Premilla Pillay; Wynne Chua; Eide Sterling; Swee Tian Quek; Malini Olivo

Multispectral Optoacoustic Tomography in Assessment of Breast Tumor Margins During Breast-Conserving Surgery: A First-in-human Case Study Yonggeng Goh, Ghayathri Balasundaram, Mohesh Moothanchery, Amalina Attia, Xiuting Li, Hann Qian Lim, Neal Burton, Yi Qiu, Thomas Choudary Putti, Ching Wan Chan, Philip Iau, Siau Wei Tang, Celene Wei Qi Ng, Felicity Jane Pool, Premilla Pillay, Wynne Chua, Eide Sterling, Swee Tian Quek, Malini Olivo


Optical Molecular Probes, Imaging and Drug Delivery | 2015

Molecular Photoacoustic Imaging of Orthotopic Glioblastoma

Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Chris Jun Hui Ho; Prashant Chandrasekharan; Ghayathri Balasundaram; Kai-Hsiang Chuang; Malini Olivo

We exploit multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) as a noninvasive in vivo and imaging modality for the molecular imaging of a NIR dye-glucose conjugate in an orthotopic glioblastoma mouse model with coregistration with MRI. The distribution of the probe in the abdomen organs was also studied.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2015

Single Molecule with Dual Function on Nanogold: Biofunctionalized Construct for In Vivo Photoacoustic Imaging and SERS Biosensing

U. S. Dinish; Zhegang Song; Chris Jun Hui Ho; Ghayathri Balasundaram; Amalina Binte Ebrahim Attia; Xianmao Lu; Ben Zhong Tang; Bin Liu; Malini Olivo

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