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1.
Tumor hypoxia, either preexisting or as a result of oxygen depletion during photodynamic therapy (PDT) light irradiation, can significantly reduce the effectiveness of PDT-induced cell killing. To overcome tumor hypoxia and improve tumor cell killing, we propose using supplemental hyperoxygenation during Photofrin-PDT. The mechanism for the tumor cure enhancement of the hyperoxygenation-PDT combination is investigated using an in vivo-in vitro technique. A hypoxic tumor model was established by implanting mammary adenocarcinoma in the hind legs of mice. Light irradiation (200 J/cm2 at either 75 or 150 mW/cm2), under various oxygen supplemental conditions (room air, carbogen, 100% normobaric or hyperbaric oxygen), was delivered to animals that received 12.5 mg/kg Photofrin 24 h before light irradiation. Tumors were harvested at various time points after PDT and grown in vitro for colony formation analysis. Treated tumors were also analyzed histologically. The results show that when PDT is combined with hyperoxygenation, the hypoxic condition could be improved and the cell killing rate at various time points after PDT could be significantly enhanced over that without hyperoxygenation, suggesting an enhanced direct and indirect cell killing associated with high-concentration oxygen breathing. This study further confirms our earlier observation that when a PDT treatment is combined with hyperoxygenation it can be more effective in controlling hypoxic tumors.  相似文献   

2.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) requires molecular oxygen during light irradiation to generate reactive oxygen species. Tumor hypoxia, either preexisting or induced by PDT, can severely hamper the effectiveness of PDT. Lowering the light irradiation dose rate or fractionating a light dose may improve cell kill of PDT-induced hypoxic cells but will have no effect on preexisting hypoxic cells. In this study hyperoxygenation technique was used during PDT to overcome hypoxia. C3H mice with transplanted mammary carcinoma tumors were injected with 12.5 mg/kg Photofrin and irradiated with 630 nm laser light 24 h later. Tumor oxygenation was manipulated by subjecting the animals to 3 atp (atmospheric pressure) hyperbaric oxygen or normobaric oxygen during PDT light irradiation. The results show a significant improvement in tumor response when PDT was delivered during hyperoxygenation. With hyperoxygenation up to 80% of treated tumors showed no regrowth after 60 days. In comparison, when animals breathed room air, only 20% of treated tumors did not regrow. To explore the effect of hyperoxygenation on tumor oxygenation, tumor partial oxygen pressure was measured with microelectrodes positioned in preexisting hypoxic regions before and during the PDT. The results show that hyperoxygenation may oxygenate preexisting hypoxic cells and compensate for oxygen depletion induced by PDT light irradiation. In conclusion, hyperoxygenation may provide effective ways to improve PDT efficiency by oxygenating both preexisting and treatment-induced cell hypoxia.  相似文献   

3.
Effective photodynamic therapy (PDT) depends on the optimization of factors such as drug dose, drug-light interval, fluence rate and total light dose (or fluence). In addition sufficient oxygen has to be present for the photochemical reaction to occur. Oxygen deficits may arise during PDT if the photochemical reaction consumes oxygen more rapidly than it can be replenished, and this could limit the efficacy of PDT. In this study we investigated the influence of the drug-light interval, illumination-fluence rate and total fluence on PDT efficacy for the photosensitizer meta-tetrahydroxyphenylchlorin (mTHPC). The effect of increasing the oxygenation status of tumors during PDT was also investigated. PDT response was assessed from tumor-growth delay and from cures for human malignant mesothelioma xenografts grown in nude mice. Tumor-bearing mice were injected intravenously with 0.15 or 0.3 mg.kg-1 mTHPC, and after intervals of 24-120 h, the subcutaneous tumors were illuminated with laser light (652 nm) at fluence rates of 20, 100 or 200 mW.cm-2. Tumor response was strongly dependent on the drug-light interval. Illumination at 24 h after photosensitization was always significantly more effective than illumination at 72 or 120 h. For a drug-light interval of 24 h the tumor response increased with total fluence, but for longer drug-light intervals even high total fluences failed to produce a significant delay in tumor regrowth. No fluence-rate dependence of PDT response was demonstrated in these studies. Nicotinamide injection and carbogen breathing significantly increased tumor oxygenation and increased the tumor response for PDT schedules with illumination at 24 h after photosensitizer injection.  相似文献   

4.
Hypericin, a polycyclic quinone obtained from plants of the genus Hypericum, has been shown to be a promising photosensitizer. We investigated the combination of hypericin-photodynamic therapy (PDT) and a bioreductive drug mitomycin C (MMC) in the present study. The radiation-induced fibrosarcoma-1 tumors were exposed to laser light (120 J/cm2 at 595 nm) 24 h after an intravenous injection of hypericin (1 mg/kg). Hypericin-PDT alone significantly decreased tumor perfusion and oxygen tension as demonstrated by India ink staining technique and OxyLite pO2 measurement, respectively. The in vivo-in vitro cell-survival assay revealed about 60% direct tumor cell killing immediately after PDT. No significant delayed tumor cell death was observed after PDT, which suggests that vascular damage does not contribute significantly to the overall tumor cell death. Injection of a 2.5 mg/kg dose of MMC 20 min before light application significantly decreased tumor cell survival and delayed tumor growth compared with PDT or MMC alone. No greater skin reaction was observed after the combination of MMC and PDT than after PDT alone. Our study demonstrates that combining hypericin-PDT with MMC can be effective in enhancing tumor response with little side effect.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract— The effects of aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid: ASA) on vessel behavior and tumor response were measured during and after photodynamic therapy (PDT). Changes to vessel constriction, macromolecular leakage, tumor interstitial pressure, and tumor response were examined. Animals were randomly placed into treatment groups and injected with 0–25 mg/kg Photofrin® and given 0 or 135 J/cm2 light treatment. The light treatment was standardized to 75 mW/cm2 at 630 nm over a 30 min treatment interval (135 J/cm2). The treatment groups were further subdivided to receive Photofrin® alone or Photofrin® plus 100 mg/kg ASA. A cremaster muscle model in Sprague-Dawley rats was used to directly observe microvascular response and changes in vessel permeability to macromolecules. A tumor interstitial pressure model was designed to measure pressure changes in a chondrosarcoma tumor over time. This model indirectly measures macromolecular leakage, among other factors, in the tumor tissue. Groups of 10–20 rats were implanted subcutaneously with chondrosarcoma and were subjected to PDT to assess tumor response to the various treatments. Statistically significant differences in vessel leakage and changes in interstitial pressure were observed between animals given ASA plus PDT as compared to animals given PDT alone. The administration of ASA significantly inhibited venule leakage of albumin and reduced increases in interstitial pressure after treatment. The use of ASA had no effect on vessel constriction or tumor response after PDT. These findings suggest that the increases in vessel permeability observed during and after PDT, using Photofrin®, do not significantly contribute to tumor response.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract— The dependence of photodynamic therapy (PDT) on changes in drug and light doses was determined in C3H/HeJ mice bearing the RIF tumor. Measurements of tumor clonogenicity were determined 24 h after PDT over a range of drug and light doses. Representative histological samples were prepared at each of these doses. Both the drug and light dose dependence experiments showed an exponential decrease in clonogenicity after an initial shoulder region. Reciprocity of drug and light dose was established from those clonogenicity curves. Histological examination of tumors gave information concerning the localization of gross damage within tumors. Increases of light dose in PDT were shown to extend the depth of necrosis within tumors. Increases of drug dose produced enlargements in the area of necrotic spots produced by PDT  相似文献   

7.
Abstract Multicell tumour spheroids (MTS) of V-79 Chinese hamster cells have been used to study the role of a number of treatment and microenvironmental parameters in the modification of tumour response to Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) using visible light in combination with the photosensitizing compound dihematoporphyrin ether (DHE). The kinetics of DHE uptake into MTS, determined by fluorimetry of extracted porphyrins, indicate that after extended incubation (i.e. 24 h) the mean cellular DHE content in larger (˜300 μ.m and 400 u.m) MTS is significantly less than that for smaller (˜200 μm) MTS, consistent with a hypothesis that DHE uptake into the internal regions of spheroids is diffusion-limited. The response of spheroids to PDT, as assessed by the endpoint of growth delay, indicates that the kinetics of spheroid volume alteration and cell loss, as well as the potential for regfrrwth, are markedly dependent on both the drug and light exposure levels used. The oxygen dependence of this response has been investigated after light irradiation of spheroid cultures equilibrated with either 21% O2 (i.e. air) or 0% 02 (i.e. N2). While treatment in air results in significant growth delay, the growth kinetics of DHE-treated spheroids irradiated under N2 were essentially unchanged from those of untreated spheroids. These observations clearly demonstrate an important role for oxygen, at the time of irradiation, in determining the response of spheroids to PDT.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract The techniques of photodynamic therapy (PDT) and the indications for its use in the treatment of intraocular tumors have evolved during the years in which it has been assessed in patients at our institution. It is now clear that transcorneal PDT delivered at a subthermal dose-rate to the surface of a pigmented lesion such as choroidal melanoma has little effect. In the absence of pigment, however, as in the case of retinoblastoma or amelanotic melanoma of the iris or choroid, the tumor kill attributed to PDT alone is significant. Data from animal tumor models in our institution and from patient studies elsewhere suggest that the addition of heat with the light delivery will predictably improve the outcome of the treatment of pigmented lesions. Ocular PDT delivered in conjunction with heat will be useful clinically as an adjunct to scleral plaque therapy by reducing the height of a lesion and concurrently the dose of radiation necessary at the base of the tumor for sterilization. Since the clinical tumoricidal effect of PDT is now known to be due at least in part to vascular damage, trans-scleral application of light to the base of melanomas and occlusion of its blood supply holds significant promise of efficacy with continued improvement of the light delivery system. Finally, a transpupillary approach to occlusion of the choroidal vascular supply to a melanoma by surrounding the tumor with photodynamic lesions may provide the best approach for ocular PDT as a primary therapy.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract— The authors performed photodynamic therapy (PDT), avoiding any hyperthermic effects, using a newly developed diode laser and photosensitizer, mono-L-aspar-tyl chlorin e6 (NPe6), of Meth-A fibrosarcoma implanted in mice and achieved tumor therapeutic benefit. The photodynamic light treatment was performed 5 h following the photosensitizer administration. With 5.0 mg/kg NPe6 and light doses of 50, 100, 150 and 200 J/cm2, the tumor cure rates were 20, 50, 70 and 90%, respectively. With 100 J/cm2 laser exposure and NPe6 doses of 1.25, 2.5, 5.0, 7.5 and 10.0 mg/kg, the tumor cure rates were 0, 20, 50, 70 and 90%, respectively. A charge-coupled device (CCD) camera system was employed to measure the NPe6 fluorescence intensity correlating with the residual amount of the photosensitizer at deferent depth from the tumor surface. The ratios of the NPe6 fluorescence intensity at 3 mm from the tumor surface following 50, 100, 150 and 200 J/cm2 laser exposure to no laser exposure were 0.73, 0.36, 0.22 and 0.16, respectively. With samples sectioned at 1 mm depth, after 50 J/cm2 and the same photosensitizer dose (5 mg/kg) this ratio was 0.19. These results suggest that a certain increase in the tumor tissue level of NPe6 and a certain increase of laser light dose reaching deeper layers of tumor caused an increase in percent cure. In addition, the effectiveness of PDT depends on the total laser dose reaching deeper layers of tumors. Furthermore, the effectiveness of PDT tends to correlate with the amount of NPe6 photobleaching by PDT.  相似文献   

10.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) regimens that conserve tumor oxygenation are typically more efficacious, but require longer treatment times. This makes them clinically unfavorable. In this report, the inverse pairing of fluence rate and photosensitizer dose is investigated as a means of controlling oxygen depletion and benefiting therapeutic response to PDT under conditions of constant treatment time. Studies were performed for Photofrin-PDT of radiation-induced fibrosarcoma tumors over fluence rate and drug dose ranges of 25-225 mW cm(-2) and 2.5-10 mg kg(-1), respectively, for 30 min of treatment. Tumor response was similar among all inverse regimens tested, and, in general, tumor hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SO2) was well conserved during PDT, although the highest fluence rate regimen (225 mWx2.5 mg) did lead to a modest but significant reduction in SO2. Regardless, significant direct tumor cell kill (>1 log) was detected during 225 mWx2.5 mg PDT, and minimal normal tissue toxicity was found. PDT effect on tumor oxygenation was highly associated with tumor response at 225 mWx2.5 mg, as well as in all other regimens tested. These data suggest that high fluence rate PDT can be carried out under oxygen-conserving, efficacious conditions at low photosensitizer dose. Clinical confirmation and application of these results will be possible through use of minimally invasive oxygen and photosensitizer monitoring technologies, which are currently under development.  相似文献   

11.
Photodynamic dose is defined as the area under the curve of sensitizer level plotted as a function of light dose. This is a photochemical definition of dose. We will show that this definition is useful in predicting photobiological response. The photodestruction of sensitizer during photodynamic therapy is shown to result in an upper limit on the photodynamic dose which can be delivered by an unlimited light dose. This limit results in the opportunity to make total photodynamic dose uniform to considerable depths (one to two centimeters). The existence of thresholds for permanent tissue damage allows protection of normal tissue from the large light doses required to achieve this limiting dose deep in the tissue. Higher sensitizer levels in the tumor permit tumor destruction while the normal tissues are protected. A clinical trial to determine the proper level of injected dose necessary for these results is required. This theory of photodynamic therapy (PDT) dosimetry is tested in the DBA-SMT experimental mouse tumor system. Combinations of drug and light which are not reciprocal but are nearly equal by this theory are shown to give equivalent tumor control at seven days post treatment. Reciprocal combinations of drug and light fail to give equivalent results when they ae selected using the theory to choose a combination where reciprocity should fail.  相似文献   

12.
This preclinical study examines light fluence, photodynamic therapy (PDT) dose and “apparent reacted singlet oxygen,” [1O2]rx, to predict local control rate (LCR) for Photofrin‐mediated PDT of radiation‐induced fibrosarcoma (RIF) tumors. Mice bearing RIF tumors were treated with in‐air fluences (50–250 J cm?2) and in‐air fluence rates (50–150 mW cm?2) at Photofrin dosages of 5 and 15 mg kg?1 and a drug‐light interval of 24 h using a 630‐nm, 1‐cm‐diameter collimated laser. A macroscopic model was used to calculate [1O2]rx and PDT dose based on in vivo explicit dosimetry of the drug concentration, light fluence and tissue optical properties. PDT dose and [1O2]rx were defined as a temporal integral of drug concentration and fluence rate, and singlet oxygen concentration consumed divided by the singlet oxygen lifetime, respectively. LCR was stratified for different dose metrics for 74 mice (66 + 8 control). Complete tumor control at 14 days was observed for [1O2]rx ≥ 1.1 mm or PDT dose ≥1200 μm J cm?2 but cannot be predicted with fluence alone. LCR increases with increasing [1O2]rx and PDT dose but is not well correlated with fluence. Comparing dosimetric quantities, [1O2]rx outperformed both PDT dose and fluence in predicting tumor response and correlating with LCR.  相似文献   

13.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) with verteporfin provides a reliable way to destroy malignant tissues. Changes in the blood flow and oxygen partial pressure (pO2) during verteporfin-PDT were studied here in the tumor tissue of the rat mammary R3230Ac carcinoma model. Oxygen microelectrodes (6-12 microns tip diameter) were used to measure the transients locally within tumors during intravenous injection of 1.0 mg/kg verteporfin followed by irradiation 15 min later with 690 nm light at 200 mW/cm2, for a cumulative dose of 144 J/cm2. The observed changes in pO2 were heterogeneous and there was a difference in the response of low-pO2 regions relative to higher-pO2 regions. The change in pO2 in hypoxic tissue regions (pO2 < 8 mmHg) had acute pO2 loss after treatment, whereas the response in regions of higher pO2 (> 8 mm Hg) was more heterogeneous with some areas maintaining their pO2 value after treatment was completed. Blood flow measurements taken on a subset of the animals indicated a significant loss in flow during the initial light delivery that remained low after treatment, indicating some vascular stasis. The results suggest that hypoxic or poorly perfused vessels may be more susceptible to acute stasis than normoxic vessels in this treatment protocol.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract— Photodynamic therapy disrupts blood flow to tumors and produces tumor necrosis. These effects may be due to a localized generation of singlet oxygen. The current studies used direct observations of the rat cremaster microvasculature to examine the vascular effects of PDT. The objective of the morphological examination was to delineate the structural basis for the altered blood flow in photodynamic therapy. Dihematoporphyrin ether given 30 min or 48 h prior to the experiment was activated with green light (wavelength530–560 nm, 120 J/cm2). After the in vivo activation the tissues were prepared for electron microscopy. Light alone induced little or no change in the luminal content or vessel wall. On exposure to activating light both acute (30 min) and long term (48 h) dihematoporphyrin ether pretreated samples displayed formation of luminal aggregates, granulocyte margination and migration, and endothelial cell and smooth muscle cell damage. The latter was more pronounced in the arterioles than the venules. Perivascular changes included interstitial edema and damage to striated myocytes. Some of the alterations such as interstitial edema may be transient; however, smooth and skeletal muscle cell injury are important in normal and tumor tissue necrosis after photodynamic therapy.  相似文献   

15.
The relationship between levels of in vivo accumulated photosensitizer (Photofrin II), photodynamic cell inactivation upon in vitro or in vivo illumination, and changing tumor oxygenation was studied in the radiation-induced fibrosarcoma (RIF) mouse tumor model. In vivo porphyrin uptake by tumor cells was assessed by using 14C-labeled photosensitizer, and found to be linear with injected photosensitizer dose over a range of 10 to 100 mg/kg. Cellular photosensitivity upon exposure in vitro to 630 nm light also varied linearly with in vivo accumulated photosensitizer levels in the range of 25 to 100 mg/kg injected Photofrin II, but was reduced at 10 mg/kg. Insignificant increases in direct photodynamic cell inactivation were observed following in vivo light exposure (135 J/cm2, 630 nm) with increasing cellular porphyrin levels. These data were inconsistent with expected results based on in vitro studies. Assessment of vascular occlusion and hypoxic cell fractions following photodynamic tumor treatment showed the development of significant tumor hypoxia, particularly at 50 and 100 mg/kg of Photofrin II, following very brief light exposures (1 min, 4.5 J/cm2). The mean hyupoxic cell fractions of 25 to 30% in these tumors corresponded closely with the surviving cell fractions found after tumor treatment in vivo, indicating that these hypoxic cells had been protected from PDT damage. Inoculation of tumor cells, isolated from tumors after porphyrin exposure, into porphyrin-free hosts, followed by in vivo external light treatment, resulted in tumor control in the absence of vascular tumor bed effects at high photosensitizer doses only.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Explicit dosimetry of treatment light fluence and implicit dosimetry of photosensitizer photobleaching are commonly used methods to guide dose delivery during clinical PDT. Tissue oxygen, however, is not routinely monitored intraoperatively even though it is one of the three major components of treatment. Quantitative information about in vivo tissue oxygenation during PDT is desirable, because it enables reactive oxygen species explicit dosimetry (ROSED) for prediction of treatment outcome based on PDT-induced changes in tumor oxygen level. Here, we demonstrate ROSED in a clinical setting, Photofrin-mediated pleural photodynamic therapy, by utilizing tumor blood flow information measured by diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS). A DCS contact probe was sutured to the pleural cavity wall after surgical resection of pleural mesothelioma tumor to monitor tissue blood flow (blood flow index) during intraoperative PDT treatment. Isotropic detectors were used to measure treatment light fluence and photosensitizer concentration. Blood-flow-derived tumor oxygen concentration, estimated by applying a preclinically determined conversion factor of 1.5 × 109 μMs cm−2 to the blood flow index, was used in the ROSED model to calculate the total reacted reactive oxygen species [ROS]rx. Seven patients and 12 different pleural sites were assessed and large inter- and intrapatient heterogeneities in [ROS]rx were observed although an identical light dose of 60 J cm−2 was prescribed to all patients.  相似文献   

17.
Fluorescence photobleaching of protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) during superficial photodynamic therapy (PDT), using 514 nm excitation, was studied in UVB-induced tumor tissue in the SKH-HR1 hairless mouse. The effects of different irradiance and light fractionation regimes upon the kinetics of photobleaching and the PDT-induced damage were examined. Results show that the rate of PpIX photobleaching (i.e., fluorescence intensity vs fluence) and the PDT damage both increase with decreasing irradiance. We have also detected the formation of fluorescent PpIX photoproducts in the tumor during PDT, although the quantity recorded is not significantly greater than generated in normal mouse skin, using the same light regime. The subsequent photobleaching of the photoproducts also occurs at a rate (vs fluence) that increases with decreasing irradiance. In the case of light fractionation, the rate of photobleaching increases upon renewed exposure after the dark period, and there is a corresponding increase in PDT damage although this increase is smaller than that observed with decreasing irradiance. The effect of fractionation is greater in UVB-induced tumor tissue than in normal tissue and the damage is enhanced when fractionation occurs at earlier time points. We observed a variation in the distribution of PDT damage over the irradiated area of the tumor: at high irradiance a ring of damage was observed around the periphery. The distribution of PDT damage became more homogeneous with both lower irradiance and the use of light fractionation. The therapeutic dose delivered during PDT, calculated from an analysis of the fluorescence photobleaching rate, shows a strong correlation with the damage induced in normal skin, with and without fractionation. The same correlation could be made with the data obtained from UVB-induced tumor tissue using a single light exposure. However, there was no such correlation when fractionation schemes were employed upon the tumor tissue.  相似文献   

18.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) requires oxygen to cause cellular and vascular tumor damage. Tissue oxygen concentration, in turn, is influenced by blood flow and blood oxygenation. Real-time clinical measurement of these hemodynamic quantities, however, is rare. This paper reports the development and application of a probe, combining diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) for measurement of tumor blood oxygenation and diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) for measurement of tumor blood flow. The instrument was adapted for clinical use during interstitial prostate PDT. Three patients with locally recurrent prostate cancer received 2 mg/ kg motexafin lutetium (MLu) 3 h before illumination and a total light dose of 100 J/cm(2) at 150 mW/cm. Prostrate blood oxygen saturation (StO2) decreased only slightly (approximately 3%) after treatment. On the other hand, prostate blood flow and total hemoglobin concentration over the course of PDT decreased by 50% and 15%, respectively, suggesting MLu-mediated PDT has an anti-vascular effect. While it is certainly impossible to draw definite conclusions from measurements of only three patients, the observed differences in tumor blood flow and blood oxygenation responses during PDT can, in principle, be used to choose among tissue oxygen consumption models and therefore emphasize the potential clinical value for simultaneous monitoring of both parameters.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract Very little is known about the applicability of the metabolic and biochemical events observed in cell culture systems to in vivo tumor shrinkage following photodynamic therapy (PDT). The purpose of this study was to assess whether PDT induces apoptosis during tumor ablation in vivo . We treated radiation-induced fibrosarcoma (RIF-1) tumors grown in C3H/HeN mice with PDT employing three photosensitizers, Photofrin-II, chloroaluminum phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate, or Pc IV (a promising phthalocyanine developed in this laboratory). Each photosensitizer was injected intraperitoneally and 24 h later the tumors were irradiated with an appropriate wavelength of red light using an argon-pumped dye laser. During the course of tumor shrinkage, the tumors were removed at 1, 2, 4 and 10 h post-PDT for DNA fragmentation, histopathologic, and electron microscopic studies. Markers of apoptosis, viz . the ladder of nucleosome-size DNA fragments, increased apoptotic bodies, and condensation of chromatin material around the periphery of the nucleus, were evident in tumor tissue even 1 h post-PDT; the extent of these changes increased during the later stages of tumor ablation. No changes were observed in tumors given photosensitizer alone or irradiation alone. Our data suggest that the damage produced by in vivo PDT may activate endonucleolysis and chromatin condensation, and that apoptosis is an early event in tumor shrinkage following PDT.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract This paper reports the retrospective comparison of a PDT dosimetry model with the current results of an ongoing clinical trial on photodynamic therapy (PDT) for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The model is based on the assumption that tumor eradication requires a minimum absorption of radiant energy by the tumor-localized porphyrins. The diffusion approximation was employed to calculate the incident light dose required to attain the minimum absorbed energy density at tumor boundaries most distant from the light source. Dosimetry tables for HNSCC were calculated with estimated tissue parameters, giving the PDT light dose for front surface exposure (FS) and illumination by interstitial cylindrical diffuser fibers (CI) in terms of the tumor dimensions. The model includes a correction for the photobleaching of the localized photosensitizer by the therapeutic light. The PDT trial was carried out on nine patients with previously untreated or recurrent early stage tumors and one patient with a recurrent advanced stage tumor. A complete response was obtained in 83% (10/12) of the sites treated. The calculated doses for FS and CI exposures vary from comparable with to three-fold lower than the actual doses for each complete response tumor site.  相似文献   

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