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Quantitative in vitro demonstration of two-photon photodynamic therapy using photofrin and visudyne.

Authors :
Khurana M
Collins HA
Karotki A
Anderson HL
Cramb DT
Wilson BC
Source :
Photochemistry and photobiology [Photochem Photobiol] 2007 Nov-Dec; Vol. 83 (6), pp. 1441-8.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT), the combined action of a photosensitizer and light to produce a cytotoxic effect, is an approved therapy for a number of diseases. At present, clinical PDT treatments involve one-photon excitation of the photosensitizer. A major limitation is that damage may be caused to healthy tissues that have absorbed the drug and lie in the beam path. Two-photon excitation may minimize this collateral damage, as the probability of absorption increases with the square of the light intensity, enabling spatial confinement of the photosensitizer activation. A potential application is the treatment of the wet-form of age-related macular degeneration, the foremost cause of central vision loss in the elderly. Herein, the commercial photosensitizers Visudyne and Photofrin are used to demonstrate quantitative in vitro two-photon PDT. A uniform layer of endothelial cells (YPEN-1) was irradiated with a Ti:sapphire laser (300 fs, 865 nm, 90 MHz) using a confocal scanning microscope. Quantification of the two-photon PDT effect was achieved using the permeability stain Hoechst 33258 and a SYTOX Orange viability stain. Visudyne was found to be around seven times more effective as a two-photon photosensitizer than Photofrin under the conditions used, consistent with its higher two-photon absorption cross-section. We also demonstrate for the first time the quadratic intensity dependence of cellular two-photon PDT. This simple in vitro method for quantifying the efficacy of photosensitizers for two-photon excited PDT will be valuable to test specifically designed two-photon photosensitizers before proceeding to in vivo studies in preclinical animal models.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0031-8655
Volume :
83
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Photochemistry and photobiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18028219
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-1097.2007.00185.x