| Literature DB >> 34522227 |
Paromita Sarbadhikary1, Blassan P George1, Heidi Abrahamse1.
Abstract
In recent years tremendous effort has been invested in the field of cancer diagnosis and treatment with an overall goal of improving cancer management, therapeutic outcome, patient survival, and quality of life. Photodynamic Therapy (PDT), which works on the principle of light-induced activation of photosensitizers (PS) leading to Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) mediated cancer cell killing has received increased attention as a promising alternative to overcome several limitations of conventional cancer therapies. Compared to conventional therapies, PDT offers the advantages of selectivity, minimal invasiveness, localized treatment, and spatio-temporal control which minimizes the overall therapeutic side effects and can be repeated as needed without interfering with other treatments and inducing treatment resistance. Overall PDT efficacy requires proper planning of various parameters like localization and concentration of PS at the tumor site, light dose, oxygen concentration and heterogeneity of the tumor microenvironment, which can be achieved with advanced imaging techniques. Consequently, there has been tremendous interest in the rationale design of PS formulations to exploit their theranostic potential to unleash the imperative contribution of medical imaging in the context of successful PDT outcomes. Further, recent advances in PS formulations as activatable phototheranostic agents have shown promising potential for finely controlled imaging-guided PDT due to their propensity to specifically turning on diagnostic signals simultaneously with photodynamic effects in response to the tumor-specific stimuli. In this review, we have summarized the recent progress in the development of PS-based multifunctional theranostic agents for biomedical applications in multimodal imaging combined with PDT. We also present the role of different imaging modalities; magnetic resonance, optical, nuclear, acoustic, and photoacoustic in improving the pre-and post-PDT effects. We anticipate that the information presented in this review will encourage future development and design of PSs for improved image-guided PDT for cancer treatment. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Cancer diagnosis; Molecular imaging; Photodynamic therapy; Photosensitizers; Theranostics
Mesh:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34522227 PMCID: PMC8419035 DOI: 10.7150/thno.62479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Figure 1General schematic representation of Photodynamic Therapy (PDT): A. Illustration of PDT where photosensitizer (PS) serves as both an imaging agent and a therapeutic agent. Advantages, disadvantages, and different strategies to enhance PDT of cancer. B. Modified Jablonski diagram showing the principle of PDT: Absorption of light energy by ground state PS (S0) results into its excitation to singlet 1PS* (S1). Intersystem crossing (ISC) transforms the S1 to excited triplet 3PS* (T1). T1 either through electron transfer to cellular biomolecules (Type I) and/or via direct energy transfer to 3O2 (Type II) results in the production of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) to induce cell death.
Figure 2Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) induced cellular effects and immune responses: Generation of reactive oxygen species induces (a) direct tumor cell killing predominantly via apoptosis and necrosis, and (b) damages tumor vasculature. In addition, PDT effect is further potentiated by activating both (c) innate and (d) adaptive immune responses against tumor, further eliminating the residual tumor cells. PS: Photosensitizer.
Characteristics of clinical molecular imaging modalities in oncology.
| PET | SPECT | CT | MRI | US | OPTICAL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| High-energy γ-ray | Low-energy γ-ray | X-rays | Radio waves | High-frequency sound waves | Visible light or near-infrared |
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| β+ emitting Radioisotope | γ- emitting Radioisotope | Krypton, Xenon, Barium and iodinated molecules | Gadolinium chelates/ superparamagnetic agents (SPIONs) | Microbubbles | Fluorescent probes/ dyes |
|
| 10-11-10-12 | 10-10-10-11 | Not well characterized | 10-3-10-5 | Not well characterized | 10-9-10-12 |
|
| 1-2 mm | 1-2 mm | 50-200 μm | 25-100 μm | 50-500 μm | 2-3 mm |
|
| 10 seconds to minutes | Mins | Mins | Mins-Hrs | Sec-Min | Sec-Min |
|
| No limit | No limit | No limit | No limit | mm-cm | < 1 cm |
|
| High sensitivity, can be used for whole body imaging | High resolution, can be used for whole body imaging, fast acquisition time | High spatial resolution, | Fast acquisition time, real-time imaging, no ionizing radiation, cost-effective | Fast acquisition time, no ionizing radiation, real-time imaging, high sensitivity, cost-effective | |
|
| Ionizing radiations, low resolution, expensive, long acquisition time | Ionizing radiations, low sensitivity, poor soft tissue demarcation | Poor sensitivity, long acquisition time, expensive | Poor contrast, low resolution | Low Resolution | |
aSensitivity is the ability of imaging technique to detect or identify the presence of a molecular probe when it is truly present, relative to its background.
bSpatial resolution is a measure of the accuracy or detail of image. It is mainly based on its detection ability to distinguish two adjacent structures as separate entities.
cTemporal resolution is the frequency at which the images are be recorded or captured. It is also represented as single acquisition time.
PET: Positron Emission Tomography; SPECT: Single-Photon Emission Computerized Tomography; CT: Computed tomography; MRI: Magnetic Resonance Imaging; US: Ultrasound
Summary of clinically relevant oncology informations provided by different imaging modalities to guide, monitor and evaluate Photodynamic Therapy responses in preclinical and clinical settings.
| Imaging Modality | Pre and Post treatment Information |
|---|---|
|
| Tumor localization in hollow tube organs |
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| Tumor localization |
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| Tumor volume |
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| Tumor volume and localization |
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| Microscopic resolution of Tumor volume and margin delineation of superficial tumors |
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| Vascular perfusion and blood flow velocity |
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| FL based PS uptake and photobleaching mediated treatment response |
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| Tumor volume and localization |
|
| Vascular structure and density |
PET: Positron Emission Tomography; SPECT: Single-Photon Emission Computerized Tomography; CT: Computed tomography; MRI: Magnetic Resonance Imaging; US: Ultrasound Imaging; FL: Fluorescence Imaging, OI: Optical Imaging; OCT: Optical Coherence Tomography; PAI: Photoacoustic Imaging; PS: Photosensitizer.
Figure 3A schematic illustration depicting the roles of structural, functional and molecular imaging in guiding pre-treatment planning, therapy monitoring, and outcome assessment in Photodynamic Therapy.
Figure 4Chemical modifications of photosensitizer molecules with resulting photophysical and photochemical changes: (a) reduction of main macrocyclic porphyrin ring results in red shift of Q band of tetrapyrrole photosensitizer, (b) peripheral modification and (c) central metal coordination of tetrapyrrole ring induce changes in singlet oxygen quantum yield (φ∆), triplet quantum yield (ΦT) and triplet state lifetime (τT) depending on the type of side groups and central metal (diamagnetic or paramagnetic). Soret band: The strong absorption band of PS in the blue wavelength region of the visible spectrum due to the S
List of photosensitizers approved or in clinical trials for Photodynamic Therapy and diagnosis in oncology.
| Class | Examples | λmax | Clinical Approval |
|---|---|---|---|
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| |||
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| |||
| Porphyrin | (a) Porfimer sodium (photofrin) | 630 nm | Approved-Bladder cancer, Endobronchial cancer, Esophageal cancer, Lung cancer, Barrett's esophagus, cervical cancer |
|
| |||
| Porphyrin precursor | (a) 5-Aminolevulinic acid (Levulan) | 635 nm | Approved- Non-melanoma skin cancers, Basal cell carcinoma, Squamous cell carcinoma |
| (b) Hexaminolevulinate hydrochloride (Hexvix®) | 635 nm | Bladder cancer diagnosis | |
| Chlorin | (a) 5,10,15,20-Tetrakis(3-hydroxyphenyl) chlorin/ Temoporfin (Foscan) | 652 nm | Approved- Head and neck, Prostate and Pancreatic cancers |
| (b) Mono-L-aspartyl chlorin e6 / Talaporfin (Laserphyrin) | 664 nm | Approved- Lung cancer, Malignant gliomas | |
| Bacteriopheophorbide | (a) Palladium-Bacteriopheophorbide (WST09)/ Padoporfin (Tookad) | 763 nm | Approved- Prostate cancer |
| (b) Bacteriopheophorbide (WST11)/ padeliporfin (Stakel) | ~ 750 nm | In clinical trials- Prostate cancer | |
| Purpurin | Tin ethyl etiopurpurin/ Rostaporfin (Purlytin) | 664 nm | In clinical trials- Basal cell cancer, Kaposi's sarcoma, Prostate cancer, Breast adenocarcinoma |
| Pheophorbide | 2-(1-Hexyloxyethyl)-2-devinyl pyropheophorbide-a / PhotoChlor | 665 nm | In clinical trials- Basal cell carcinoma, Esophagus, Skin, Mouth and Throat cancers, |
| Texaphyrin | Motexafin lutetium (Antrin/ Lutrin) | 732 nm | In clinical trials- Prostate, Breast, Cervical, Brain, Skin and Superficial cancers |
| Porphyrin related-Phthalocyanine (Pc) | (a) Aluminum phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate chloride (Photosens) | 676 nm | In clinical trials- Stomach, Skin, Lip, Oral, and Breast cancers |
| (b) Zinc pthalocyanine | 676 nm | In clinical trials- Skin cancer, | |
| (c) Silicon Phthalocyanine | 675 nm | In clinical trials- Skin cancer | |
| B. Non-Porphyrin based | |||
| Anthraquinone | Hypericin | 600 nm | In clinical trials- Cutaneous T-cell Lymphoma |
| Cyanine | Indocyanine green (IR125) | 695-780 nm | In clinical trials- Imaging-guided detection and PDT |
Figure 5The structural designing of photosensitizer for therapy and imaging: Non metallated and metallated (radioactive or nonradioactive isotope) in the form of conjugates, linked with targeting moiety and nanoparticles for application in image-guided Photodynamic Therapy.
Figure 6Schematic illustration of principle of upconverting nanoparticles (UCNPs) mediated Upconversion Luminescence (UCL) imaging and Photodynamic Therapy (PDT): A. Upconversion process in the UCNPs under Near Infrared Radiation (NIR) excitation, and the Luminescence resonance energy transfer (LRET) between UCNP and photosensitizer (PS). B. Deeper penetration of NIR compared to visible light excites UCNPs and converts NIR to visible wavelength emission for activation of the PS producing Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) to induce PDT mediated tumor damage with simultaneous imaging with UCL.
Figure 7Schematic design and illustration of Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) probes for Structure of SERS probe consisting of a metal nanoparticle as plasmonic core, adsorbed Raman reporter molecule on the metal surface, a biocompatible surface coating layer loaded with photosensitizer (PS), B. Depiction of energy transitions of photons during different types of light scattering upon absorption of light by plasmonic nanoparticle. Representation of SERS image and SERS spectra of tumor.
Figure 8Schematic illustration of microbubble mediated ultrasound-assisted imaging and guided Photodynamic Therapy (PDT): A. Ultrasound (US) targeted microbubble destruction (UTMD) followed by (a) induced transformation of microbubbles to nanoparticles, (b) CO2 generation and photosensitizer (PS) release, resulting in tumoral uptake and in vivo PDT; B. Illustration of US induced Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound (CEUS) imaging, PDT and Sonodynamic Therapy (SDT).
Representative theranostic activatable photosensitizers as conjugates and nanoparticles for simultaneous imaging and Photodynamic Therapy.
| Activating factor | PS and Nanoformulation | Targeting moiety | Imaging technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low pH | aza-BODIPY (NEt2Br2BDP) Cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartate motif (cRGD)-functionalized nanomicelle | cRGD for αvβ3 integrin-rich tumor cells. | NIR |
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| Chlorin e6 (CaCO3-mineralized NPs) | -- | US |
| |
| Methylene Blue (CaCO3 nanorods) | -- | US |
| |
| Pheophobide-a (FA-BSA-c-PheoA) | Folate | NIR |
| |
| Zn(II) phthalocyanine (Layered double hydroxide-PcS supramolecular nanohybrid) | -- | FLI |
| |
| Sinoporphyrin sodium (Manganese-doped calcium phosphate mineralized glucose oxidase nanoparticles) | -- | FLI and MRI |
| |
| Indocyanine green (Mesoporous silica-coated gold nanorods) | -- | FLI and PAI |
| |
| Hyaluronidase | Indocyanine green (MnO2 modified hyaluronic acid NPs) | Hyaluronic acid for CD44 receptor binding | FL and PAI |
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| Chlorin e6 (HA-ADH-Ce6 NPs) | Hyaluronic acid for CD44 receptor binding | NIR and PAI |
| |
| Reducing TME | Chlorin e6 (Ce6-heparin- alpha-tocopherol succinate) | -- | NIR |
|
| Chlorin e6 (Ce6- dextran conjugates nanoformulations) | -- | NIR |
| |
| Chlorin e6 (Ce6-fucoidan conjugates nanogels) | Fucoidan for P-selectin surface protein | NIR |
| |
| Chlorin e6 (α-cyclodextrin (α-CD) and poly (ethylene glycol) -Ce6) | -- | NIR |
| |
| Low pH & reducing TME | Toludine blue (FeOOH modified NaLuF4:Yb,Er,Tm@NaLuF4) | -- | UCL |
|
| Chlorin e6 (CNT@MnO2-PEG@Ce6 | Folate terminated aminated poly (ethylene glycol) (FA-PEG-NH2) | MRI |
| |
| H2O2 | Pro-photosensitizer (MBPB) converted to active methylene blue (BSA-MBPB nanoformulations) | -- | NIR and PAI |
|
| Low pH and H2O2 | Chlorin e6 (Ce6/MnOx@HMSNs-PEG) | -- | MRI |
|
| Methylene blue (SiO2-MB@MnO2) | -- | MRI |
| |
| Reducing TME and matrix metalloproteinase | Chlorin e6 (PEGylated Ce6-MMP2 NPs) | Matrix metalloproteinase 2 | NIR |
|
| Biomolecules responsive | ||||
| Albumin | Zn(II) phthalocyanine (Self-assembled supramolecular nanovesicle) | __ | FLI |
|
| Nucleic acid | Zn(II) phthalocyanine (Mitoxantrone and Zn(II) phthalocyanine supramolecular nanoassembly) | __ | FLI |
|
| Biotin | Zn(II) phthalocyanine | Biotin moiety | FLI and PAI |
|
NIR: Near Infrared Imaging, MRI: Magnetic Resonance Imaging; PAI: Photoacoustic Imaging; UCL: Upconversion Luminescence Imaging; US: Ultrasound Imaging; FLI: Fluorescence Imaging; NPs: Nanoparticles; TME: Tumor microenvironment
Figure 9Theranostic Photosensitizers: Applications of theranostic photosensitizers (PS) in various imaging modalities: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Positron Emission Tomography (PET), Optical Imaging (OI), X-ray computerized tomography (CT), Ultrasound Imaging (US), Photoacoustic Imaging (PAI).