EFFICACY OF PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY ON ORIGINAL AND RECURRENT RAT MAMMARY TUMORS |
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Authors: | Scott L. Gibson My Lien Nguyen Thomas H. Foster Geoffrey White Russell Hilf |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USA;University of Rochester Cancer Center, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USA;Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester College of Arts &Sciences, Rochester, NY 14627, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() Abstract— Photodynamic therapy has demonstrated efficacy toward primary, metastatic and recurrent human tumors. Here, we investigated the ability of photodynamic therapy, using Photofrin, to inhibit growth of R3230AC mammary adenocarcinomas when tumors were treated as original implants and again as lesions recurring at the initial treatment site. The results demonstrate that both initial implants and lesions recurring after the first photodynamic treatment respond similarly to the same photodynamic therapy protocol, with mean tumor volume doubling times of ˜ 11 days in both cases. Cells cultured from original tumor implants or tumors that recurred after photodynamic treatment accumulate equivalent amounts of [14C]polyhematoporphyrin. Single cell suspensions prepared from either original or recurrent tumors from animals administered 5 mg/kg Photofrin and exposed to light in vitro displayed comparable phototoxicity. Additionally, examination of tumors by light microscopy revealed no morphological differences between the original tumor implants and the recurrent lesions. Taken together, these data indicate that lesions which recurred at the site of the initial photodynamic treatment were not resistant to a second identical course of photodynamic therapy. |
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