A reliable animal model for quantitative assessment of local recurrence of colorectal cancer was developed using colo26 tumour in BALB/c mice. The effect of adjuvant intraoperative photodynamic therapy to potentially curative surgery on local recurrence was examined in four study and four control groups. Study groups received 15 mg kg-1 Photofrin (a photosensitizing drug) 24 h before surgery. After 'curative' tumour excision, the tumour beds were illuminated with either 630 nm or 510 nm laser light each at 40 and 70 J/cm-2. Controls received surgery only, surgery and Photofrin only or surgery and either 630 nm or 510 nm light. The local recurrence rates at 70 days were 17-33 per cent in the study groups compared with 83-100 per cent in the control groups (P < 0.001; log rank test). Photodynamic therapy is capable of reducing local recurrence following potentially curative excision of tumour in this model.
AIOPDT using either Photofrin or m-THPC was equally effective in reducing local recurrence in this model. Since treatment time with m-THPC was only 25 s compared with 11 min with Photofrin, the use of the former new photosensitizer increases the practicality of AIOPDT and could enable the laser to be replaced with cheaper, less intense light sources.
AIOPDT using either Photofrin or m-THPC was equally effective in reducing local recurrence in this model. Since treatment time with m-THPC was only 25 s compared with 11 min with Photofrin, the use of the former new photosensitizer increases the practicality of AIOPDT and could enable the laser to be replaced with cheaper, less intense light sources.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.