| Literature DB >> 35057015 |
Yang Hao1, Chih Kit Chung1,2,3, Zhenfeng Yu1, Ruben V Huis In 't Veld1, Ferry A Ossendorp4, Peter Ten Dijke5, Luis J Cruz1.
Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT), in which a light source is used in combination with a photosensitizer to induce local cell death, has shown great promise in therapeutically targeting primary tumors with negligible toxicity and minimal invasiveness. However, numerous studies have shown that noninvasive PDT alone is not sufficient to completely ablate tumors in deep tissues, due to its inherent shortcomings. Therefore, depending on the characteristics and type of tumor, PDT can be combined with surgery, radiotherapy, immunomodulators, chemotherapy, and/or targeted therapy, preferably in a patient-tailored manner. Nanoparticles are attractive delivery vehicles that can overcome the shortcomings of traditional photosensitizers, as well as enable the codelivery of multiple therapeutic drugs in a spatiotemporally controlled manner. Nanotechnology-based combination strategies have provided inspiration to improve the anticancer effects of PDT. Here, we briefly introduce the mechanism of PDT and summarize the photosensitizers that have been tested preclinically for various cancer types and clinically approved for cancer treatment. Moreover, we discuss the current challenges facing the combination of PDT and multiple cancer treatment options, and we highlight the opportunities of nanoparticle-based PDT in cancer therapies.Entities:
Keywords: cancer photodynamic therapy; cancer vaccines; checkpoint inhibitor therapy; chemotherapy; combined therapy; drug delivery; radiotherapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35057015 PMCID: PMC8780767 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14010120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Mechanism of photodynamic therapy in cancer. The antitumor effects of PDT include three main mechanisms: PDT-induced cellular toxicity, vascular destruction, and immune response activation. When exposed to excitation wavelength light, the ground-state photosensitizer moves to a singlet state. In this state, PS can decay by emitting fluorescence, react with biological substrate, or undergo intersystem crossing, thereby being converted into a triplet state with longer life span (microseconds) and parallel spins. Triplet excited PS directly interacts with cell substate to generate toxic reactive oxygen species to directly kill tumor cells by inducing apoptosis, necrosis, or autophagy. PDT also induces tumor vasculature damage and immune responses. Abbreviations in figure: photosensitizer (PS), photosensitizer first excited state (1PS*), photosensitizer triplet excited state (3PS*), water (H2O), triplet oxygen (3O2), singlet oxygen (1O2), reactive oxygen species (ROS), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), superoxide anions (O2−), hydroxyl radicals (OH−).
Figure 2Different generations of PSs widely used in various cancer cell types. Currently developed PSs can be divided into first-generation PSs, second-generation PSs, and third-generation PSs. The description is provided as follows: ● chemical name (abbreviation)(trade name is indicated with®, and excitation wavelength is indicated in “nm“ during clinical PDT procedure). If information is not available, this is indicated with (-). λ in PTW represents the typical wavelength at which absorption of photosensitizer occurs to penetrate into tissues (PTW, λ > 600 nm), and ε represents the absorption rate at PTW.
Figure 3Summary of the advantages and disadvantages of major cancer therapies. PDT-based combination therapies for the treatment of cancer integrate the advantages and bypass the disadvantages of monotherapies, including surgery, radiotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, and other combined strategies.
Clinical trials of photodynamic therapy-based combination strategies.
| Phase | Photosensitizer | Combined Interventions | Cancer Type | Status | Years of Study | Clinical Trial Reference Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase I | Temoporfin (Foscan®) | Surgery | Non-small-cell lung cancer | Completed | 2013–2019 | NCT01854684 |
| HPPH (Photochlor®) | Surgery | Head and neck cancer | Completed | 2007–2018 | NCT00470496 | |
| HPPH (Photochlor®) | Surgery (laser therapy) | Primary or invasive larynx cancer | Completed | 2008–2018 | NCT00675233 | |
| Motexafin lutetium | Surgery | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia | Terminated | 2003–2013 | NCT00005808 | |
| - (Not marked) | Surgery and radiosensitizer (etanidazole) | Intraperitoneal or pleural cancer | Terminated | 2003–2013 | NCT00028782 | |
| Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Surgery | Malignant mesothelioma | Completed | 2003–2011 | NCT00054002 | |
| Hematoporphyrin derivative | Radiotherapy (brachytherapy) | Lung cancer | Completed | 2004–2013 | NCT00014066 | |
| Hexaminolevulinate (HAL) | Placebo ointment | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia | Completed | 2010–2016 | NCT01256424 | |
| Aminolaevulinic acid (ALA) | Adjuvant (vitamin D3) | Pre-malignant anal tumor | Recruiting | 2016– | NCT02698293 | |
| Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Chemotherapy (gemcitabine hydrochloride) | Advanced pancreatic cancer | Completed | 2013–2018 | NCT01770132 | |
| Phase II | Aminolaevulinic acid (ALA) | Surgery | Superficial non-melanoma skin cancer | Completed | 2003–2013 | NCT00002963 |
| Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Surgery and chemotherapy | Non-small-cell lung cancer | Terminated | 2008–2020 | NCT00601848 | |
| Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Surgery and chemotherapy (cisplatin) | Malignant pleural mesothelioma | Completed | 2016–2018 | NCT02662504 | |
| Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Surgery and chemotherapy | Malignant pleural mesothelioma | Recruiting | 2014– | NCT02153229 | |
| Hexaminolevulinate (HAL) | Placebo | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia | Terminated | 2008–2013 | NCT00708942 | |
| Aminolaevulinic acid (ALA) | Placebo | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia | Completed | 2015–2019 | NCT02631863 | |
| Phase II/III | Methyl-5-aminolevulinate hydrochloride (Metvix®) | Surgery (Ablative CO2 laser) | Basal cell carcinoma | Completed | 2010–2015 | NCT01260987 |
| Phase III | Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Chemotherapy (gemcitabine/cisplatin) | Cholangiocarcinoma | Terminated | 2014–2019 | NCT02082522 |
| Porfimer sodium (Photofrin®) | Chemotherapy (S-1) | Cholangiocarcinoma | Completed | 2009–2014 | NCT00869635 | |
| Methyl-5-aminolevulinate hydrochloride (Metvix®) | Placebo cream | Basal cell carcinoma | Completed | 2007–2010 | NCT00472108 | |
| Methyl-5-aminolevulinate hydrochloride (Metvix®) | Cryotherapy | Basal cell carcinoma | Completed | 2007–2010 | NCT00469417 |
Figure 4Most used codelivery systems for combined therapies with PDT in cancer, including (A) polymeric nanoparticles (PNPs), (B) nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs), (C) solid lipid nanoparticles (SLNs), (D) liposomes, (E) gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), and (F) hydrogels.
Figure 5The mechanisms of NP-mediated chemo-photodynamic therapy enhance monotherapy indices and synergistically trigger robust antitumor immune responses for anti-primary and metastatic tumors: (1) intravenous injection of PSs and chemotherapeutic agents loaded with nanoparticles; (2) enhanced NP accumulation in tumor due to the tumor-targeting capability of NPs (EPR effects and targeting motif modification on NP surface); (3) primary tumor ablation by enhanced PDT and chemotherapy. PDT-caused vasculature rupture induced surviving tumor cells to produce more protumor factors in the tumor microenvironment. Antiangiogenetic mediators, such as VEGF and COX-2 inhibitors, help PDT to achieve more powerful tumor destruction and a lower recurrence or metastasis rate, by blocking tumor angiogenetic activity molecules or their receptors; (4) PDT and chemotherapy (anthracyclines, cyclophosphamide, and oxaliplatin) of the primary tumor to induce higher ICD levels and the release of tumor-associated antigens. Anthracyclines also induce dsRNA release from dead tumor cells, which can activate tumor-specific CD8+ T cells by binding to Toll-like receptor-3 and inducing type I interferon production; (5) DC maturation and antigen presentation are enhanced by PDT-generated antigens, proinflammatory cytokines, and chemotherapeutic agents; (6) cross-priming in tumor lymph node; (7) Chemotherapeutic agents in NPs can improve PDT-induced immune responses by modulating the activity of immune cell subsets and by promoting tumor cell death.
Preclinical studies on organic nanoparticles for codelivery in PDT plus chemotherapy.
| PS | Chemo Drugs | Delivery System | Specific Function of Delivery System | Cancer Models | Therapeutic Outcomes of Combination | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polymeric Nanoparticles | ||||||
| Ce6 | DOX | RGD–PEG–DOX nanoparticles | pH-responsive; tumor targeting by RGD peptide | MDA-MB-231 cells, MCF-7 cells; MDA-MB-231 tumor-bearing mouse model | High cytotoxicity effect in vitro due to improved cellular uptake; significantly enhanced antitumor effect with lower cardiotoxicity of DOX, according to the pathological analysis | [ |
| Ce6 | Curcumin | Crosslinked polyphosphazene nanoparticles (FHCPCe NPs) | PH/redox dual-stimuli-responsive; dual-modal imaging (fluorescent imaging (FL) and computed tomography (CT)) | HeLa xenograft cervical cancer mouse model | Synergistic antitumor activity both in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | MnO2-loaded PCLA–PEG–PCLA NPs (CDM NPs) | Intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2; trimodal imaging (FL, PA, MRI) | MCF-7 xenograft human breast tumors | Enhanced tumor growth inhibition and the inhibition ratio (IR) calculated by tumor weight was 92.35%, with no appreciable impact on body weight or the major organs in mice | [ |
| HPPH | Camptothecin (CPT) | Polymeric nanoparticles | ROS-responsive; dual-imaging (PA and FL) | Nude mice bearing CT26 colorectal cancer | Effectively inhibit tumor proliferation and growth in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| TPPS2a | DOX | Copolymer nanoparticles | O2-evolving and ROS-activable; tumor targeting by F7 peptide | MCF-7/ADR tumor-bearing mice | Enhanced cell killing effects in vitro; prolonged survival time of combined therapy to 41 days, compared to NP-based PDT (32 days) and free DOX (25 days). | [ |
| TPCS2a | DTX | Polymeric nanoparticles (HA@DTX/TPCS2a-NPs) | Tumor targeting ability | CD44high MDA-MB-231 and the CD44low MCF-7 cells; mammosphere | Enhanced killing CSCs effects in vitro by 2D and 3D assay | [ |
| TPCS2a | CPT | Double-layered polymeric nanoparticles | Tumor targeting due to HA | DTX-sensitive (HeLa-P, MDA-MB-231) and DTX-resistant (HeLa-R) cancer cells | Synergistic antitumor activity in vitro and reduced DTX dose in NPs by ~2.6- and 10.7-fold in HeLa-P and MDA-MB-231, respectively; reduced DTX doses in NPs by more than 100 times in DTX-resistant HeLa-R cells | [ |
| Polymer PFV materials | Prodrug BDOX | DSPE–PEG–iRGD–PFV–BDOX conjugated polymer NPs | Tumor targeting by iRGD peptide; ROS-responsive | PC-3 human prostate cancer cells | Enhanced cancer cell killing effects in vitro due to enhanced tumor cell targeting and uptake | [ |
| ICG | Oxaliplatin (OXP) | PLGA–PFP–OXP–ICG NPs | Photoacoustic and ultrasonic imaging | ID8 ovarian tumor mouse model | Improved antitumor effects on cancer cell due to enhanced DAMPs expression | [ |
| IR780 | DOX | Amphiphilic nanoparticles (F-IR780–PEG) | Intratumorally self-sufficiency of O2; NIR-responsive; high oxygen capacity | Nude mice bearing MCF-7 human breast cancer | Remarkable therapeutic efficacy in killing tumor cells and destroying solid tumor | [ |
| Hematoporphyrin (HP) | DOX | PEG-modified hematoporphyrin (HPP)-based NPs (HPPD) | Enhanced drug release at pH 5.8, along with laser radiation | MCF-7 human breast cancer cells and MHCC-97H human hepatoma cancer cells; nude mice bearing ADR/MCF-7 human breast tumors | A 12-fold decreased IC50 value due to improved drug penetration, resulting in promoted apoptosis in vitro; compared to free Dox, which failed to constrain tumor growth, combined therapy had efficient drug-resistant tumor ablation to an undetectable level in 2 weeks without inducing myocardial injury | [ |
| Protoporphyrin (Por) | Epirubicin (EPI) | EPI-loaded cRGD–PEG–PH–PCL–Por | pH sensitivity; tumor targeting due to cRGD | CT26 murine colorectal tumor mouse model | Higher anticancer effectiveness, both in vitro with an IC50 = 0.47 μg/mL and in vivo, than that of free EPI | [ |
| 5,10,15,20-Tetraphenylchlorin (TPC) | PTX dimer (PTX2-TK) | RBC-membrane-coated (TPC–PTX2–TK–PEG) NPs | Prolonged blood circulation and improved tumor accumulation by coating RBC membrane | Nude mice bearing HeLa human cervical carcinoma | Enhances anticancer therapeutic activity; reduces systematic toxicity due to light-triggered drug release, as certificated by H&E staining and serum biochemical analysis of main organs | [ |
| NPs | SN38 | Multifunctional SN38-conjugated polymeric nanosystem (FA-PDA@PZM/SN38@BSA-MnO2) | Intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2; MRI imaging | Eca-109-esophageal tumor-bearing mice | Superior antitumor efficacy in Eca-109 tumor-bearing mice with low gastrointestinal toxicity and myelosuppression | [ |
| Pyrolipid | Pt | Polymer-based core–shell nanoparticles | Drug release in a triggered manner | Human head and neck cancer SQ20B xenograft murine model | Superior potency and efficacy in tumor regression (83% reduction in tumor volume) at low drug doses in a cisplatin-resistant cancer model | [ |
| ZnPc | DTX | Biodegradable core–shell nanoassemblies | Biodegradability and biosafety | HeLa cells, nude mice bearing A375 human amelanotic melanoma | Improved tumor growth-inhibitory effects compared to single therapy | [ |
| Lipid-based NPs | ||||||
| Photosan-2 | Cisplatin (CDDP) | Lipid platinum-chloride nanoparticles (LPC NPs) | - | Nude mice bearing SAS squamous cell carcinoma | Significantly enhanced the therapeutic outcome in tumor volume reduction, compared to single therapies (~110.8% tumor growth inhibition); reduced the tumor growth rate | [ |
| porphyrin | PTX | Porphyrin–lipid nanoemulsions | Imaging ability | KB xenografts tumor-bearing nude mice | Fourfold reduced PTX (1.8 mg/kg) dose in combined therapy with a superior antitumor effect, compared to single PTX therapy (7.2 mg/kg), resulting in reduced side-effects associated with chemotherapy | [ |
| VP | Nano-Pt | Nano-Pt/VP@MLipo | Intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 | 4T1 breast tumor mouse model | Significantly inhibited tumor cell viability in vitro (2D and 3D model); enhanced tumor inhibition and extended mice survival time with no lung metastasis, compared to monotherapies | [ |
| ICG | TPZ | Hybrid PLGA/lipid-PEG NPs | Tumor targeting by RGD peptide; improved penetration | 3D tumor spheroids and orthotopic 4T1 breast tumor model | Synergistic cell-killing effect in vitro and effective primary tumor growth and metastasis inhibition; enhanced necrosis (~95% necrotic area) compared to control group (~30%), by analysis of the H&E tumor sections | [ |
| Hydrogel | ||||||
| ZnPc | DOX | Polymer hydrogel | Thermosensitive | Nude mice bearing 5637 human bladder tumors | Excellent cell-inhibitory effects in vitro, with cell viability of 18.5%, which is attributed to a high level of ROS generation (4.8-fold free ZnPC); slightly higher increased survival rate compared to chemo and PDT single groups | [ |
| Micelles | ||||||
| Mitoxantrone (MX) | MX | PEGylated UCNP (UPG) micelles | Tumor targeting by grafting with an anti-EpCAM antibody; dual-modality MR/UCL imaging | BEL-7404 liver carcinoma mouse model | 94.4% cell death in vitro for combined therapy, compared to 67.6% for chemo only, which was attributed to the physicochemical property of micelles; remarkable antitumor effect with final tumor volume: 235.5 ± 87.4 mm3, with negligible side-effects, as demonstrated by the images of H&E-stained major organs slices | [ |
| IR780 | DOX | Polydopamine nano clustered micelles (TPGS-IR780@PDA) | Enhanced intracellular accumulation by TPGS (a drug efflux inhibitor) | Nude mice bearing ADR/MCF-7 human breast tumors | Improved tumor-inhibitory efficiency, as evidenced by tumor sizes starting to reduce after 2 days of treatment (8 days for PDT group) | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | Polymer–UCNP hybrid micelles (PUHMs) | NIR-triggered | HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | High cytotoxicity for cancer cells in vitro, due to upconverted emission energy triggering ROS generation and faster DOX release | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX prodrug (PDOX) | Gd3+-loaded copolymeric micelles conjugated with PS | Acid-switchable multimodal imaging (FL, PA, MR) capability | Nude mice bearing ADR/MCF-7 human breast tumors | Notably inhibited the tumor growth and completely eradicated two of the tumors, compared to single therapy; obvious DNA damage and membrane lysis revealed by H&E staining and notable apoptosis of tumor cells revealed by TUNEL staining | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | Self-assembled polyethyleneimine–nitroimidazole (PEI–NI) micelles | Hypoxia trigger; PA imaging; tumor targeting by HA | LLC xenograft tumor-bearing mice | Significantly stronger anticancer efficacy than single therapy in vitro, evidenced by IC50 value of DOX (1.15 µg/mL) or Ce6 (0.16 µg/mL) in combined group lower than those of chemotherapy (>10 µg/mL) or PDT (0.75 µg/mL); compared therapy showed remarkably prolonged survival after 35 days observation. | [ |
| 5-(4-Carboxyphenyl)-10,15,20-triphenylporphyrin (Por) | GNA002 | Micellar GNA002@cPRP | pH-sensitive; tumor targeting by cRGD; improved drug penetrability in vitro and prolonged tumor-retainability in vivo | HeLa, HN6, A375, MCF-7, and HN30 cancer cells and HeLa tumor-bearing mice | Decreased IC50 and increased cell apoptosis for combined group, compared to single therapy, due to increased ROS generation in vitro; tumor weight on day 14 was just 6.3% and 6.7% of that of the saline group of the HeLa and HN6 cancer-bearing mice, respectively, with negligible body weight loss; widespread cancer cell necrosis and apoptosis caused by combined therapy in H&E staining images; highest TUNEL expression and lowest cancer cell proliferation in the TUNEL-staining and Ki-67 staining images, respectively | [ |
| Porphyrin | DOX | PEG–PGMA–PDPA Janus macromolecular brushes | Improved drug loading capability by π–π stacking; pH-responsive | 4T1 breast cancer mouse model | In vitro studies showed the lowest cell viability (IC50: 7.2 µg/mL TPP and 2.5 µg/mL DOX); in vivo studies confirmed that NP-based combination exhibited high phototoxicity and significant tumor inhibition efficacy | [ |
| Other Organic Nanoparticles | ||||||
| Ce6 | DTX | Redox-responsive polymer HA–cys-DHA/Ce6 (CHD) | Redox-responsive; Tumor-targeting by HA | MCF-7 breast tumor mouse model | Synergistic antitumor activity in vitro, due to inhibition of microtubule depolymerization, blocking cell cycle, and generating ROS, leading to best antitumor response in vivo | [ |
| Ce6 | Pt(IV) | Oxygen and Pt(II) self-generating conjugate | Intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 | BALB/c mice bearing HeLa, HCT116, and MDA-MB-231 tumors | Enhanced anticancer efficacy both in vitro and in vivo; specifically, in vivo results showed that two of the five mice in combined treatment group were healed, and the tumor volumes of the other three mice decreased to very little | [ |
| Ce6 | TPZ | Self-assembly PA/HA–Ce6@TPZ NPs | Tumor targeting by HA; dual hypoxia-responsive | Nude mice bearing 4T1 breast cancer | Synergistic anticancer treatment due to PDT-mediated hypoxia-induced cascade TPZ therapy | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | DOX-NPs/Ce6-microbubble complex | Local release due to the cavitation of NPs; enhanced extravasation and penetration due to energy of ultrasound | Nude mice bearing MIA-paca-2 human pancreatic carcinoma | Increased therapeutic effects in vitro by cell viability assay and in vivo by normalized tumor volume | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | Hyperbranched polyphosphate SOHNPCe6/DOX | NIR-triggered | Nude mice bearing ADR/MCF-7 human breast tumors | Enhanced in vitro apoptosis inducing efficiency (56.82%) and lower cell viability at 72 h (80.46 ± 6.31%), compared to single-therapy group; high antitumor efficacy in drug-resistant breast cancer nude mouse model | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | Ce6/Dox@NPs–cRGD | Tumor targeting by cRDG | MCF-7 xenograft human breast tumors | Significantly shrank tumor volume and prolonged survival time, compared to single therapies, with negligible body weight changes and staining organ slices | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX precursor (CAD) | Co-assembly LA–CAT–CAD@Ce6 NPs | Tumor targeting by lactobionic acid; pH-sensitive; intratumorally self-sufficiency of O2 | Nude mice bearing human MCF-7/ADR breast tumor cells | Enhanced cell killing and apoptosis efficiency in vitro and the most effective tumor inhibition and ablation ability | [ |
| Ce6 | Docetaxel (DTX) | Keratin nanoparticle | Monophasic release | DTX-sensitive HeLa (HeLa-P) and DTX-resistant HeLa (HeLa-R) cells | In monolayers, combined therapy had comparable cytotoxicity to free drugs toward HeLa-P cells, but synergic interaction in HeLa-R cells; induced stronger cytotoxicity and volume reduction rate in spheroids | [ |
| Ce6 | SN38 | Carrier-free nanoparticles (SN38/Ce6 NPs) | Carrier-free | 4T1 murine breast cancer cell lines | Significant increase in the inhibition rate by 85%, compared to single therapy, in vitro due to enhanced tumor accumulation and higher cellular internalization | [ |
| PheoA | DOX | DOX–PheoA–alginate NPs) | NIR-triggered drug release | B16 tumor-bearing mice | Enhanced tumor growth inhibition by combined therapy with increased serum IFN levels | [ |
| PheoA | DOX | Self-assembly PEG–thioketal–DOX NPs | ROS-responsive; phototriggered release | Nude mice bearing CT-26 colorectal cancer | Enhanced anticancer therapeutic effect in vitro by cell viability assay and in vivo by tumor volume change, due to spatiotemporally controlled cascade drug release | [ |
| VP | TMZ | Pluronic P85/F127 copolymers | Tumor targeting by biotin | T98-G, U87-MG, and U343 glioblastoma cells | Enhanced antiproliferative effect in vitro via different cell-cycle arrest mechanisms of drug action, especially at low TMZ concentrations and higher light doses | [ |
| Hypocrellin B (HB) | PTX | Hyaluronic acid–ceramide nanoparticle | Tumor targeting due to HA | Nude mice bearing A549 human lung adenocarcinoma | Enhanced phototoxicity in vitro and improved anticancer efficacy, by tumor volume change, compared to single PDT and NP-based PDT | [ |
| Pyropheophorbide a (PPa) | PTX | Self-assembly heterotypic chemo-photodynamic dimer | ROS-responsive | KB xenograft tumor-bearing nude mice, 4T1 xenograft tumor-bearing BABL/c mice | Synergistic antitumor activity, both in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Carbon dots (CDs) | Metformin (Met) | Traceable DOX/Met/BSA–HA–CDs | Dual-drug system; fluorescence imaging; tumor targeting by HA | MCF-7/ADR human breast cancer cells; S180 murine sarcoma tumor mouse model | Synergistic treatment achieved considerably highest cytotoxicity in vitro and enhanced cancer therapeutic efficiency in vivo, which was attributed to MET reducing the tumor O2 consumption, resulting in increased the therapeutic efficiency of oxygen-consumed PDT | [ |
| ?? | DOX | Regenerated silk fibroin-based PC–Mn@Dox-NPs | Multimodality factors responding, resulting in controlled release; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 | 4T1 breast cancer mouse model | Enhanced in vitro and in vivo anticancer efficacies, compared to all other combination approaches of PDT and DOX, due to multifactor triggered DOX release and oxygen-dependent PDT enhanced by self-sufficient O2 | [ |
| ICG | Cisplatin (DDP) | Human serum albumin (HSA)–ICG–DDP NPs | NIR-triggered drug release | HSC human oral squamous cell cancer cells and NCM-460 colonic epithelial cells | Improved cytotoxicity for cancer cells in vitro due to higher ROS generation; significantly enhanced tumor growth inhibition compared to 632.06 ± 52.49 mm3 in the NP-PDT group and 482.25 ± 42.69 mm3 in the NP-chemotherapy group | [ |
| ZnPC | DOX | Phthalocyanine-conjugated Glyco-NPs | pH-responsive; good colloidal stability; tumor targeting owing to GLUT5 | 3T3, MCF7, and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells | High cytotoxicity effect in vitro, due to higher cellular internalization and induction of ROS generation | [ |
| ICG | Bromoisophosphoramide mustard intermediate (IPM-Br) | Semiconducting polymer NPs | Light-responsive; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2; NIR imaging | Nude mice bearing 4T1 breast cancer cells | Synergetic anticancer effects due to improved chemo prodrug efficiency (4.3-fold higher, compared with its prodrug-free counterpart) due to PDT-enhanced degree of hypoxia; increased photodynamic efficacy (18-fold higher than ICG) | [ |
| Boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) | Lenvatinib (VEGFR inhibitor) | Self-assembling NPs (LBPNPs) | pH-sensitive | Human HCC cell lines Hep3B and Huh7 | Effectively inhibited tumor growth in vitro by promoting the cascade of caspase apoptotic protease | [ |
Preclinical studies on inorganic nanoparticles for codelivery in PDT plus chemotherapy.
| PS | Chemo Drugs | Delivery System | Specific Function of Delivery System | Cancer Models | Therapeutic Outcomes of Combination | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gold NPs | ||||||
| Au NPs | PTX | PTX-loaded pluronic-PEI@Au NPs | NIR-sensitive; ion channel inhibition | Nude mice bearing PC3 human prostate cancer | Enhanced therapeutic efficiency in vitro and in vivo, with low toxicity on liver function and minimal side-effects to normal organs | [ |
| Up-conversion NPs | ||||||
| CeO2 NPs | DOX | Lanthanide ion-doped mesoporous hollow cerium oxide UCNPs (Ce-UCNPs) | pH-sensitive; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 due to H2O2-responsive ability | U87MG malignant glioma tumor mouse model | Remarkable cell viability inhibition in vitro and tumor growth inhibition, compared to treatment with DOX or PDT, with negligible systemic toxicity (little body weight difference between groups) | [ |
| ZnFe2O4 | Pt(IV) prodrugs | UCNPs–Pt(IV)–ZnFe2O4, denoted as UCPZ | Multimodality bioimaging (UCL, CT, MRI, and PA); inhibited biological clearance; enhanced tumor accumulation | U14 cervical tumor mouse model | Significantly enhanced antitumor effect in vivo | [ |
| ZnFe2O4 | DOX | UCNPs with a mesoporous ZnFe2O4 shell (UCNPs@mSiO2) | Trimodal imaging (CT, UCL, MRI) | HeLa xenograft cervical tumor mouse model | High anticancer effectiveness both in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Rose Bengal (RB) | DOX | UCN@mSiO2-(Azo + RB) nanoimpellers | Faster drug release due to Azo molecules | HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | High cytotoxicity effect for cancer cells in vitro | [ |
| Rose Bengal (RB) | Pt(IV) prodrugs | Biocompatible core–shell–shell UCNPs (PEG/RB-Pt(IV)-UCNPs) | NIR-triggered drug release | A2780 and A2780cisR human ovarian cancer cells | Improved cytotoxicity for both cisplatin-sensitive and -resistant human ovarian cancer cells in vitro | [ |
| Rose Bengal (RB) | DOX | Cancer cell membrane (CM)-cloaked UCNPs | ROS-sensitive; inhibited biological clearance; enhanced tumor accumulation | Primary 4T1 murine model; Metastatic Luc-4T1 breast orthotropic tumor model | Enhanced uptake in tumor cells and deeper penetration in spheroids; strong synergistic antitumor efficacy and synchronously causes increased DAMPs release, leading to tumor-specific immunity; when combined with anti-CD73 antibodies, had a better effect on lengthening the period of survival and inhibiting lung metastasis than monotherapies associated with stronger systemic cytotoxic T-cell responses | [ |
| Rose Bengal (RB) | DOX | NIR-triggered ROS-sensitive (UCN/SiO2-RB + DOX) @PPADT NPs | NIR-triggered drug release | HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | Achieved a better inhibitory effect on cancer cell in vitro at concentrations over 100 mg/L than single therapy | [ |
| RBHA | Pt | CaF2: Yb3+/Er3+ UCNPs coated with NaGdF4 shells (UCNPs–RBHA–Pt–PEG) | Multimodality bioimaging (UCL, MRI) | CT26 murine colorectal carcinoma cells | Visibly decreased tumor sizes for combined therapy group at a low irradiation power density (0.35 W/cm2, 6 min) | [ |
| Methylene blue (MB) | DOX | NaYF4:Yb,Er UCNPs | Tumor targeting due to anti-HER2 peptide | SKBR-3 (HER2-positive) and MCF-7 (HER2-negative) breast cancer cells | Significant decline in the cell viability by 95%, compared to 77% for chemo-drug and 84% for PDT only in vitro; cell viability was suppressed by 66% in a 3D model of SKBR-3 tumor spheroids, due to improved uptake of NPs | [ |
| ZnPc | DOX | Protein–polymer bioconjugate-coated multifunctional UCNPs | Excellent water solubility, good stability, and low toxicity; real-time imaging capability | HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | Enhanced tumor cell killing efficiency in vitro | [ |
| Ce6/ZnPc /methylene blue (MB) | DOX | Red-emitting up-converting nanoparticles (α-CD-UCNPs) | - | A549 human epithelial lung cancer cells | Higher therapeutic efficacy, relative to the individual means, for cancer therapy in vitro | [ |
| Polyelectrolyte brushes (PFNS) | AQ4N | pH-sensitive Mn-Ca3(PO4)2 (MnCaP) layer-coated UCNP@PFN | pH-sensitive; hypoxia-activated; multi-imaging (MRI, FL, UCL) | HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | Enhanced therapeutic effect, thereby reaching a tumor inhibition rate as high as 83%; highest level of cell apoptosis, as evidenced by H&E staining of tumor slices | [ |
| Graphene oxide (GO) | DOX | UCNPs–DPA–NGO–PEI–DOX | UCL imaging; improved drug loading capability | U14 murine liver cancer xenograft tumor mouse model | Substantially superior cell killing effects in vitro, due to sensitive disulfide bond; higher tumor inhibition efficiency than monotherapies | [ |
| UCNPs | DOX | Core/shell structure SPTP@UCNP-RB NPs | NIR-controlled; tumor targeting to E-selectin; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 | Multicellular spheroid model; 4T1 murine breast cancer model | Synergistic anticancer effects and improved ICD levels in cells; enhanced uptake, penetration, and antitumor efficacy against multicellular spheroids; synergistically destroyed the orthotopic tumors and efficiently suppressed lung metastasis by cascade-amplifying systemic antitumor immunity through induction of ICD with CD8+/CD4+ T-cell infiltration and IL-6/IL-10 secretion | [ |
| Ceramic Nanoparticles (Silicon dioxide Nanoparticles) | ||||||
| Ce6 | Pt(IV) prodrugs | MSNs/Ce6/Pt | Biocompatibility and stability; higher cellular uptake | Cisplatin-resistant A549R lung cancer cells | Improved treatment efficiency due to elevated cellular ROS level in vitro | [ |
| Ce6 | DOX | Erythrocyte-mimetic MSNs (RMSNs-Dox/Ce6) | Biocompatibility and stability; high loading capacities; irradiation sensitive; inhibited biological clearance; enhanced tumor accumulation | 4T1 breast tumor mouse model | Effective cell killing ability, up to 92.1% cell death after treatment, compared to 75.2% in the NP-based chemotherapy group; enhanced tumor inhibition rate (91.4%), which was significantly higher than PDT single (68.9%) and chemotherapy single (73.7%) therapy, respectively; inhibited 75.1% metastatic foci to lung, which was more effective than monotherapies | [ |
| TMPyP | DOX | MSN@SiNPs@TMPyP-FA | Biocompatibility and stability; biological autofluorescence; tumor targeting by HA | MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cells and A549 human lung cancer cells | High cytotoxicity for tumor cells in vitro | [ |
| IR780 | DOX | Leukocyte/platelet hybrid membrane-camouflaged dendritic large pore MSNs (LPHM@DDI NPs) | Biocompatibility and stability; tumor targeting by P-selectin/CD44 binding; inhibited biological clearance; enhanced tumor accumulation | 4T1 breast tumor mouse model | Synergistic cytotoxicity and apoptosis-inducing activity in vitro; effective tumor suppression and recurrence prevention in vivo through directly killing tumor cells and indirect anti-angiogenesis | [ |
| ICG | TPZ | Erythrocyte and tumor cell membrane camouflaged MSNs (IT@MSN@RTM) | Biocompatibility and stability; inhibited biological clearance; enhanced tumor accumulation; irradiation sensitive | 4T1 breast tumor mouse model | 1.3 times tumor inhibition rate of combined therapy, compared to 47% in the PDT treatment group alone | [ |
| HCE6 | OXP | OH-MSNs | Biocompatibility and stability; pH-sensitive | Nude mice bearing FRH0201 human hilar cholangiocarcinoma | Enhanced proliferation-inhibitory effects and killing effect of oxaliplatin in NPs in vitro; much more effective in inhibiting tumor growth in vivo compared with O-MSNs | [ |
| Tellurium (Te) | PTX | Double hydroxide gated MSNs (MT@L-PTX@FA) | Biocompatibility and stability; sustained release; pH-sensitive; tumor targeting by FA | HepG2 human hepatocyte carcinoma cells | Enhanced cancer cell killing effects in vitro by increased ROS generation | [ |
| IR820 | TPZ | Glutathione decomposable MSNs (GMONs) | Biocompatibility and stability; GSH/enzyme dual-responsive; tumor targeting by HA | 4T1 breast tumor mouse model | Enhanced tumor inhibition rate of dual-loaded nanohybrids was up to 76% under NIR laser irradiation in vivo, due to PDT-induced hypoxia resulting in improved TPZ effects | [ |
| Hematoporphyrin (HP) | DOX | CeO2 NPs coated dual-loaded MSNs (MSN-HP-DOX@CeO2) | Triple-sensitive (GSH, pH, and light irradiation) | HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | High cytotoxicity to cancer cells, due to the more controllable DOX release under triple factors | [ |
| Si-Pc | DOX | 68Ga-labeled magnetic-NIR persistent luminescent hybrid MNPs (DOX/Si-Pc-loaded HMNPs) | Trimodal imaging (NIR-PL, PET, MRI) | Nude mice bearing LNCaP human prostate cancer cells | Outstanding cancer cell killing ability in vitro and tumor suppression effect in vivo, due to prolonged NPs retention and DOX release in tumor area | [ |
| Ceramic Nanoparticles (Titanium Oxide Nanoparticles) | ||||||
| Au@TiO2 NPs | DOX | Zwitterionic polymer-gated Au@TiO2 core-shell nanoparticles | NIR-sensitive; MRI imaging; improved hemocompatibility of NPs; prolonged circulation time. | Nude mice bearing HeLa human cervical carcinoma | Both in vitro and in vivo anticancer experiments demonstrated that the tumor was effectively inhibited, with few side-effects | [ |
| ZnPc | Chlorambucil (CBL) | TiO2 nanoparticles (mTiO2-BCBL@ZnPC NPs) | NIR-triggered; ROS-triggered; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 | MCF-7 human breast cancer cells | High cytotoxicity effect for cancer cells in vitro due to higher cellular internalization and induction of ROS generation | [ |
| TiO2 | DOX | Mesoporous TiO2 ADH-1–HA–MTN/DOX NPs | Tumor dual targeting by CD44 and N-cadherin; irradiation by X-ray | A549 human non-small-cell lung carcinoma cell line | Enhanced cancer cell killing effects and cell inhibition rate in vitro by increased ROS generation; potential to overcome drug resistance problem by preventing EMT process | [ |
| Magnetic Nanoparticles | ||||||
| Si-Pc | DOX | 68Ga-labeled magnetic-NIR persistent luminescent hybrid MNPs (DOX/Si-Pc-loaded HMNPs) | Trimodal imaging (NIR-PL, PET, MRI) | Nude mice bearing LNCaP human prostate cancer cells | Studies with mice tumor models demonstrated that the NP-based combination possessed excellent cancer cell killing ability and an outstanding tumor suppression effect without systemic toxicity, which is associated with prolonged tumor retention of NPs and the durable release of loaded DOX within tumor tissues | [ |
| CuS NPs | DOX | Hollow mesoporous CuS NPs capped with magnetic iron oxide NPs (HMCuS/DOX@IONP-PEG) | Controlled drug release; magnetic targeting; property and MR imaging | Nude mice bearing MCF-7 human breast cancer cells | Improved treatment efficiency due to increased drug levels at tumor site and elevated cellular ROS level in vivo; reduced cardiotoxicity of DOX in NPs than free drug | [ |
| ICG | Pt(IV) prodrugs | MoS2 nanoflowers (MoS2@Fe3O4-ICG/Pt(IV)) | Trimodal imaging (MR, IR, PA) | L929 fibroblast cells or Hela cells, H22 live cancer mouse model | Enhanced antitumor efficacy by both in vitro and in vivo assays | [ |
| Ce6 | Celastrol (CSL) | Manganese/iron-based nanoprobes (Fe3O4@MnO2-CSL/Ce6) | pH-responsive; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2; T1/T2 MRI and PA imaging | Nude mice bearing Bel-7402 human hepatocellular carcinoma cells | Synergistic therapeutic effects for tumor inhibition through improving the tumor hypoxic environment, thereby enhancing PDT effects | [ |
| ICG | DOX | MnO2-coated silk fibroin NPs (SF@MnO2/ICG/DOX) | Intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2; dual imaging (FL and MRI) | 4T1 breast tumor mouse model | Significant tumor inhibitive efficacy, with a tumor growth inhibition rate of 89.6%, compared to moderate tumor inhibition effect of single therapies at 14 days; H&E staining, TUNEL assays, Ki67, DHE, and HIF-α IF staining of the excised tumor sections were subsequently performed, in order to evaluate the tumor tissue destruction | [ |
| Calcium Carbonate Nanoparticles | ||||||
| ICG | TPZ | Hybrid CaCO3/TPGS nanoparticles | Tumor targeting by RGD peptide | Subcutaneous U87MG and orthotopic B16F10 tumor-bearing mouse model | Intensive effects in vitro and in tumor inhibition, with negligible side-effects | [ |
| Metal-Organic Framework-Based PDT plus Chemotherapy | ||||||
| Porphyrin | DOX | ZnO-gated porphyrinic MOF-AS1411 | pH-sensitive; Tumor targeting by nucleolin-specific AS1411 aptamer | Nude mice bearing human HeLa human cervical carcinoma cells | Highly efficient cancer cell killing and tumor inhibition; tumor ablation was also even achieved, without undesirable side-effects | [ |
| RuII polypyridyl alkyne complex (Ra) | DOX | UiO–Ra–DOX–CuS | pH-sensitive; NIR-triggered drug release; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2 | MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells | Improved cytotoxicity for cancer cells in vitro than chemotherapy alone (69% vs. 42%) | [ |
| Photochlor (HPPH) | AQ4N | Azido-/PS-terminated UiO-66-H/N3 NMOFs | Hypoxia-triggered; enhanced dispersion by PEG layer | Nude mice bearing U87MG human glioblastoma cancer | Enhanced therapeutic efficacy with negligible systemic toxicity due to PDT and hypoxia-activated cytotoxicity of AQ4N | [ |
| Ce6 | Gambogic acid (GA) | MnO2-based core–shell GC@MCS NPs | Hypoxia-triggered; intratumoral self-sufficiency of O2; increased penetration; tumor-targeting by HA | 4T1 mammary tumor models | Superior potency and efficacy in tumor regression; 92.41% of 4T1 tumor inhibition rate | [ |
| Au@TiO2 NPs | DOX | Polymer-gated Au@TiO2 core–shell nanoparticles | NIR-sensitive; MRI imaging; improved hemocompatibility of NPs; prolonged circulation time | Nude mice bearing HeLa human cervical carcinoma | Both in vitro and in vivo anticancer experiments demonstrated the tumor was effectively inhibited, with minimal side-effects, by the multifunctional NPs | [ |
| ICG | TPZ | Zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8) coated ZnS NPs (ZSZIT) | Hypoxia-activated; H2S-sensitive cascade | Nude mice bearing Huh7 human hepatoma | Synergistic antitumor effect both in vitro (by CCK8 assay) and in vivo (by tumor volume change) | [ |
| Other Inorganic Nanoparticles | ||||||
| octaethylporphine (OEP) | Cis-(PEt3)2Pt (OTf)2 (cPt) | Metallacage-loaded NPs | Tumor targeting by cRGDfK; enhanced tumor accumulation and cellular internalization ability | Nude mice bearing A2780/A2780CIS ovarian tumor | Highest antitumor outcome, with 89.2% tumor inhibition rate, compared to 14.1%, 25.5%, and 66.8% for chemo, NP-chemo, and NP-PDT, respectively; decreased the hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity of the platinum-based anticancer drug | [ |
| TPP | Cis-(PEt3)2Pt (OTf)2 (cPt) | Metallacage-loaded NPs | Enhanced penetration into drug-resistant 3D tumor spheroids | HuH7 human hepatocellular carcinoma cells and CCLP-1 intrahepatic cancer cells | Enhanced ability to decrease tumor cell mobility and sphenoid formation; CSCs from these spheroids have a lower tumorigenicity, compared to CSCs in the spheroids after single therapy | [ |
| ICG | DOX | Hollow mesoporous Prussian blue (HMPB)@PEI/ICG/DOX) | FL imaging due to ICG | 4T1 tumor-bearing mouse models | Effective tumor inhibition effect with a tumor growth inhibition rate of 95.5%, while single therapies did not effectively suppress tumor growth in the long term; insignificant short-term toxicity or damage to normal tissues | [ |
| NPs | DOX | Hollow CuS nanocubes (CuS@PEG) | NIR-triggered; pH-sensitive | HepG2 human hepatocyte carcinoma cells | Enhanced specific cytotoxicity to cancer cells in vitro | [ |
| NPs | DOX | Silver NPs | pH-sensitive; intracellularly probed; tumor targeting by FA | SKOV-3 and L1210 cells | Enhanced toxicity in vitro | [ |
Figure 6NP-mediated photodynamic therapy in combination with various immune therapies, including vaccination, immune checkpoint inhibitors, oncolytic viruses (OVs), and adjuvants. The combination works to enhance the key factors of the immune-oncology cycle—antigen release, antigen presentation, APC activation, T-cell activation, T-cell infiltration, and antigen recognition—to kill primary tumor cells and overcome tumor recurrence and metastases.
Preclinical studies on PDT plus immunotherapy.
| PS | Therapeutic Agents | Delivery System | Therapeutic Outcomes of Combination | Cancer | Cytokines | Immune Cells | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPD-MA | Anti-PD1 post NP-based PDT | Poly (ethylene glycol)-modified metal–organic nanoparticles | Enhanced antitumor efficacy for primary tumor; inhibitory effects on lung metastasis | 4T1 murine breast cancer cells | ND | CD8+ T cells | [ |
| Ce6 | Codelivery with DOX to generate | Cancer cell membrane (CCM)-coated calcium carbonate (CC) nanoparticles | Enhanced ICD; effective inhibition of both primary and distant growth with low-dose PDT and chemotherapy | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | IL-6, | ND | [ |
| In situ vaccine | Lipid (Li)-coated calcium carbonate (CC) vehicle (Li/CC) | Enhanced inhibitory effects on primary and distant tumor growth | Colorectal cancer | - | - | [ | |
| Autologous tumor cell-based vaccines | Fmoc-KCRGDK-phenylboronic acid (FK-PBA) hydrogel | Efficiently inhibited tumor relapse | B16-OVA, CT26 | TNF-α, | DCs, Treg CD4+/CD8+ T cells | [ | |
| Codelivery with CpG ODNs to generate in situ vaccine | Mesoporous silica nanoparticles | Enhanced immunogenic cell death; effective accumulation of bMSN in tumors (up to 9.0% ID/g) after intravenous administration; enhanced antitumor efficacy against locally treated tumors and distant, untreated tumors | MC-38 murine colorectal tumor model, B16F10 murine tumor model | IFN-γ | CD8+ T cells, DCs | [ | |
| In situ vaccine and further anti-PD1 treatment | PDA@UCNP-PEG/Ce6 | Strong antitumor immune responses; enhanced antitumor efficacy for primary tumor; inhibitory effects on disseminated tumor growth; inhibitory effects on tumor relapse and metastasis | B16F10c, 4T1 murine tumor model | ND | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells, memory T cells | [ | |
| Codelivery with R837 to generate | UCNP-Ce6-R837 nanoparticles | Strong antitumor immune responses; enhanced antitumor efficacy for primary tumor; inhibitory effects on distant tumor growth; prevented tumor recurrence through a long-term immune memory function | CT26 murine colorectal tumor model | IL-12, | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells, memory T cells | [ | |
| Anti-CTLA4 treatment post NP-based PDT | CM@M-MON@Ce6 nanoparticles | Enhanced ICD; notable eradication of primary and deeply metastatic tumors | MCF-7 murine breast tumor model | TNF-α, | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells, CTLs | [ | |
| Codelivery with R837 to generate | Ce6-CAT/PEGDA hybrid hydrogel | Enhanced antitumor efficacy by means of one injection followed by repeated stimulations; inhibitory effects on distant tumor growth; prevented tumor recurrence through a long-term immune memory function | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | IFN-γ, | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T-cells, memory T cells, Tregs, myeloid-derived suppressor cells | [ | |
| Anti-PD1 treatment post NP-based PDT | PDA@UCNP-PEG/Ce6 | Strong antitumor immune responses; enhanced antitumor efficacy for primary tumor; inhibitory effects on disseminated tumor growth; inhibitory effects on tumor relapse and metastasis | B16F10c, 4T1 murine breast tumor mice model | ND | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells, memory T cells | [ | |
| Anti-PDL1 treatment post NP-based PDT | H-MnO2-PEG/C&D nanoparticles | Strong antitumor immune responses; enhanced combating effects of the primary tumor progression; inhibitory effects on untreated distant tumors | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | IL12, | Macrophage, cytotoxic T lymphocytes | [ | |
| Anti-PDL1 treatment post NP-based PDT | Ce6/MLT@SAB nanoparticles | Improved levels of ICD and abilities to activate dendritic cells in vitro; enhanced PDT killing efficiency in vitro by NPs; augmented antitumor effects | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | ND | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells, myeloid-derived suppressor cells | [ | |
| Codelivery with DOX and then treatment with anti-PDL1 | Hybrid TKHNP-C/D nanoparticles | Evoked anticancer immune responses; enhanced inhibition of primary and distant tumor growth | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | TNF-α, | DCs, CD8+ T cells, CTLs | [ | |
| Cu-doped carbon dots (CDs) | Anti-PDL1 therapy and starving-like therapy after NP-based PDT | γ-PGA@GOx@Mn, Cu-CDs nanoparticles | Improved treatment efficiency; inhibitory effects on nonirradiated tumors due to systematic antitumor immune response | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | IFN-γ | CTLs, DCs | [ |
| HPPH | Codelivery with Dox to generate in situ vaccine | Chimeric crosslinked polymersomes | Enhanced immunogenic cell death; increased mature DCs in tumor-draining lymph nodes (tdLNs) and CD8+ T cells in tumor tissues; enhanced inhibitory effects on primary and distant tumor growth | MC38 murine colorectal tumor model | IL6 | CD8+ T-cells, DCs | [ |
| In situ vaccine | Graphene (HPPH)–PEGylated GO NPs conjugated with an HK peptide | Effectively ablated primary tumors and destroyed residual tumor cells with SPECT/CT imaging capability; enhanced antitumor immunity and immune memory, which help to prevent distant lung metastasis | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | IFN-γ | CD8+ T cells, DCs | [ | |
| H2TCPP | Codelivery with CpG ODNs; in situ vaccine | PCN–ACF–CpG@HA metal–organic nanoparticles | Enhanced immunogenic cell death; effective inhibition of both primary and HIF-1α-induced survival and metastasis | H22 murine hepatic carcinoma cells | TNF-α, | DCs | [ |
| ICG | Codelivery with siRNA PD-L1 | Mn@CaCO3/ICG nanoparticles | Efficient delivery of the loaded drug to the tumor tissues; improved tumor hypoxia; roused the immune system | Lewis lung tumor cells | TNF-γ, | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells | [ |
| Codelivery with R837 and then treat with anti- CTLA4 | PLGA-ICG-R837 nanoparticles | Generated more tumor-associated antigens; generated immunological responses will be able to attack remaining tumor cells in mice, which is useful in metastasis inhibition | 4T1 murine breast tumor model, CT26 murine colorectal tumor model | IL-12, | DCs, CD4+/CD8+ T cells, memory T cells | [ | |
| Porphyrin | Codelivery with cetuximab, further treatment with anti-PDL1 | EGFR–CPIG liposomal nanohybrid cerasomes | Enhanced antitumor efficacy | CT26 murine colorectal cancer | - | - | [ |
| PpIX | Codelivery with CpG ODNs and then anti-PD-L1 therapy | Cu9S5@mSiO2-PpIX@MnO2 (CSPM) nanoparticles | Notable eradication of primary tumor; Further combined with PD-L1 blockade therapy, showed potential to inhibit metastasis of tumors | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | TNF-α, | CD8+ T-cells, CTLs | [ |
| Pyropheophorbide | Codelivery with oxaliplatin to generate in situ vaccine, then combined with anti-PDL1 | NCP@pyrolipid core-shell nanoparticles | Enhanced immunogenic cell death and immunity of PDT; regression of primary tumors and distant tumors in bilateral syngeneic mouse | CT26 and MC38 murine colorectal tumor models | IFN-γ, | CD4+/CD8+ T cells | [ |
| Pyrolipid | Anti-PDL1 treatment after NP-based PDT | ZnP@pyro nanoparticle | NP-PDT sensitized tumors to checkpoint blockade therapy; enhanced inhibition of primary tumor growth and untreated distant tumors; prevented metastasis to the lung | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | IL-6, | Macrophages, DCs | [ |
| ZnPc | Codelivery with CpG ODNs | CpG–ODN–Au–ZnPc–poly gold nanoparticles | Increased toxicity of NP-combined therapy than single treatment in vitro; enhanced cytokine levels | 4T1 murine breast cancer cells | IL-2, | DCs | [ |
| Sinoporphyrin sodium (DVDMS) | Codelivery with PD-1 protein by coating onto NP surface (substituting for Anti-PD1) | Human serum albumin (HSA)–perfluorotributylamine @HSA–DVDMS@PD-1 membrane, PHD@PM | Enhanced antitumor efficacy (maturation of DCs and tumor infiltration of CTLs) | 4T1 murine breast tumor model | TNFαIL10 | DCs, CTLs, Th cells, Tregs | [ |
| 5,10,15,20-Tetra-(4-aminophenyl) porphyrin | Anti-PDL1 treatment post NP-based chemo-PDT | Copper-doped nanoscale covalent organic polymer | Inhibited tumor growth and activated immune responses; suppressed distant tumor growth and cancer metastasis | CT26 murine colorectal tumor models | INF -γ, TNF-α | DCs, CTLs, CD4+/CD8+ T-cells | [ |
Figure 7Nanoparticle-based PDT generated vaccines: (a) NPs carrying PS and/or immune adjuvants accumulate in tumor tissue after administration. Through irradiation, PDT itself will supply tumor antigens; (b) NPs carrying PDT-generated tumor antigens or ex vivo stimulated mature DCs (and/or together with immune adjuvant) are administered systemically as conventional vaccines. This activates and expands effector T cells for vaccine antigen-specific systemic responses. With the help of immune adjuvants and other ICD inducers, strong systemic antitumor immunity against all tumor antigens will be induced, and PDT treatment will ablate surviving tumor cells and metastatic cells.