Literature DB >> 14666654

An outline of the hundred-year history of PDT.

Johan Moan1, Qian Peng.   

Abstract

Photosensitizing drugs have been known and applied in medicine for several thousand years. However, the scientific basis for such use was vague or non-existent before about 1900. Photodynamic therapy, PDT, has now become an established treatment modality for several medical indications. Notably, in the cases of skin actinic keratosis, several forms of cancer and blindness due to age-related macular degeneration, PDT has been successful. PDT is the combined application of a lesion-localizing photosensitizer and light. PDT with porphyrin derivatives as photosensitizing drugs was developed from about 1960. The basic, underlying mechanisms for tumour localization of photosensitizers and processes explaining the effect of PDT on tumours were elucidated from about that time. It has become clear that PDT is efficient only in the presence of oxygen, and that the oxygen dependency of PDT is similar to that of X-rays. Singlet oxygen, 1O2, a short-lived product of the reaction between an excited sensitizer molecule and oxygen, plays a key role. In contrast to radiation therapy and chemotherapy, PDT has a low mutagenic potential and, except for skin phototoxicity, few adverse effects. Approvals for clinical use of PDT now exist in many countries. The annual number of scientific articles on PDT, clinical as well as basic, steadily increases and new aspects and applications of it continue to be discovered. Many of the new investigators are obviously not aware of the early work in the field and repeat many of the experiments that had been reported before the Internet and modern data bases were established. Therefore, in the present historical review, the early work is weighted more heavily than recent work that is more easily accessible to the readers.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14666654

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anticancer Res        ISSN: 0250-7005            Impact factor:   2.480


  82 in total

1.  Photodynamic therapy combined with terbinafine against chromoblastomycosis and the effect of PDT on Fonsecaea monophora in vitro.

Authors:  Yongxuan Hu; Xiaowen Huang; Sha Lu; Michael R Hamblin; Eleftherios Mylonakis; Junmin Zhang; Liyan Xi
Journal:  Mycopathologia       Date:  2014-11-01       Impact factor: 2.574

Review 2.  Photodynamic therapy and anti-tumour immunity.

Authors:  Ana P Castano; Pawel Mroz; Michael R Hamblin
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 60.716

3.  Phenothiazinium antimicrobial photosensitizers are substrates of bacterial multidrug resistance pumps.

Authors:  George P Tegos; Michael R Hamblin
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 5.191

Review 4.  Neuron and gliocyte death induced by photodynamic treatment: signal processes and neuron-glial interactions.

Authors:  A B Uzdenskii; M S Kolosov; A V Lobanov
Journal:  Neurosci Behav Physiol       Date:  2008-08-16

5.  A high-throughput photodynamic therapy screening platform with on-chip control of multiple microenvironmental factors.

Authors:  Xia Lou; Gwangseong Kim; Hyung Ki Yoon; Yong-Eun Koo Lee; Raoul Kopelman; Euisik Yoon
Journal:  Lab Chip       Date:  2014-03-07       Impact factor: 6.799

Review 6.  Topical antimicrobials for burn infections - an update.

Authors:  Mert Sevgi; Ani Toklu; Daniela Vecchio; Michael R Hamblin
Journal:  Recent Pat Antiinfect Drug Discov       Date:  2013-12

7.  Porphyrin-based photocatalytic lithography.

Authors:  Jane P Bearinger; Gary Stone; Allen T Christian; Lawrence Dugan; Amy L Hiddessen; Kuang Jen J Wu; Ligang Wu; Julie Hamilton; Cheryl Stockton; Jeffrey A Hubbell
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2008-04-02       Impact factor: 3.882

8.  High-power light-emitting diode array design and assembly for practical photodynamic therapy research.

Authors:  Eric M Kercher; Kai Zhang; Matt Waguespack; Ryan T Lang; Alejandro Olmos; Bryan Q Spring
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 3.170

9.  X-ray induced photodynamic therapy with copper-cysteamine nanoparticles in mice tumors.

Authors:  Samana Shrestha; Jing Wu; Bindeshwar Sah; Adam Vanasse; Leon N Cooper; Lun Ma; Gen Li; Huibin Zheng; Wei Chen; Michael P Antosh
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-08-01       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  In vitro targeted photodynamic therapy with a pyropheophorbide--a conjugated inhibitor of prostate-specific membrane antigen.

Authors:  Tiancheng Liu; Lisa Y Wu; Joseph K Choi; Clifford E Berkman
Journal:  Prostate       Date:  2009-05-01       Impact factor: 4.104

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