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Journal ArticleDOI

Photodynamic therapy with endogenous protoporphyrin IX: basic principles and present clinical experience.

TLDR
In the ongoing clinical trial of ALA-induced Pp IX photodynamic therapy, the response rate for basal cell carcinomas following a single treatment has been 90% complete response and 7.5% partial response for the first 80 lesions treated.
Abstract
5-Aminolaevulinic acid (ALA) is a precursor of protoporphyrin IX (Pp IX) in the biosynthetic pathway for haem. Certain types of cells have a large capacity to synthesize Pp IX when exposed to an adequate concentration of exogenous ALA. Since the conversion of Pp IX into haem is relatively slow, such cells tend to accumulate photosensitizing concentrations of Pp IX. Pp IX photosensitization can be induced in cells of the epidermis and its appendages, but not in the dermis. Moreover, since ALA in aqueous solution passes readily through abnormal keratin, but not through normal keratin, the topical application of ALA in aqueous solution to actinic keratoses or superficial basal cell or squamous cell carcinomas induces Pp IX photosensitization that is restricted primarily to the abnormal epithelium. Subsequent exposure to photoactivating light selectively destroys such lesions. In our ongoing clinical trial of ALA-induced Pp IX photodynamic therapy, the response rate for basal cell carcinomas following a single treatment has been 90% complete response and 7.5% partial response for the first 80 lesions treated. The cosmetic results have been excellent, and patient acceptance has been very good.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photodynamic therapy for cancer

TL;DR: PDT is being tested in the clinic for use in oncology — to treat cancers of the head and neck, brain, lung, pancreas, intraperitoneal cavity, breast, prostate and skin.
Book

Photodynamic Therapy

C.J. Gomer
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of mechanisms of subcellular and tumor localization of photosensitizing agents, as well as of molecular, cellular, and tumor responses associated with photodynamic therapy, are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Imaging and photodynamic therapy: mechanisms, monitoring, and optimization.

TL;DR: The basic premise of this review is that a combination of imaging and PDT will provide improved research and therapeutic strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

How were new medicines discovered

TL;DR: It is postulate that a target-centric approach for first-in-class drugs, without consideration of an optimal MMOA, may contribute to the current high attrition rates and low productivity in pharmaceutical research and development.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Non-invasive technique for obtaining fluorescence excitation and emission spectra in vivo.

TL;DR: Using this system, it is found possible to obtain good emission and excitation spectra of the material responsible for the weak red fluorescence that characterizes normal mouse skin, and to follow the biosynthesis and subsequent clearance of protoporphyrin IX in the skin of non‐anesthetized mice that had been given various doses of the porphyrIn precursor 5‐aminolevulinic acid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental porphyric neuropathy: a preliminary report.

TL;DR: Injection of either tetraphenylporphinesulfonate, hematoporphyrin derivative, or delta-aminolevulinic acid into mice resulted in markedly decreased motor nerve conduction velocity, and there was no recovery of nerve function within 60 days following injection of substantially smaller doses of TPPS.
Book ChapterDOI

Genetic, Metabolic, and Biochemical Aspects of the Porphyrias

TL;DR: The human porphyrias comprise a group of inherited and acquired disorders characterized by aberrations in activities of specific enzymes of the heme biosynthetic pathway and are described in this review only to the extent that the biochemistry and genetics of these disorders seem to bear on their clinical presentations.
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