Advances in Cancer Therapy 2011
DOI: 10.5772/22935
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Vascular-Targeted Photodynamic Therapy (VTP)

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“…Vascular damage due to VTP results in vessel constriction, blood flow stasis, and thrombus formation, which consequently blocks the supply of oxygen and nutrients, causing tumor necrosis [3]. The advantages of VTP over traditional photodynamic therapy include: (1) the use of hydrophilic PSs, which, due to their short retention time, do not generate adverse photosensitization of a patient; (2) the rapid localization of a PS in endothelium; (3) the availability of molecular oxygen required for a photochemical reaction; (4) the amplified effect on tumor cells resulting from the supply of multiple tumor cells through a single vessel [3,4]. Currently, three vascular-targeted photosensitizers, namely palladium bacteriopheophorbide (TOOKAD ® ), its water-soluble derivative padeliporfin (WST11), and verteporfin (Visudyne ® ), are approved for clinical use [5,6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vascular damage due to VTP results in vessel constriction, blood flow stasis, and thrombus formation, which consequently blocks the supply of oxygen and nutrients, causing tumor necrosis [3]. The advantages of VTP over traditional photodynamic therapy include: (1) the use of hydrophilic PSs, which, due to their short retention time, do not generate adverse photosensitization of a patient; (2) the rapid localization of a PS in endothelium; (3) the availability of molecular oxygen required for a photochemical reaction; (4) the amplified effect on tumor cells resulting from the supply of multiple tumor cells through a single vessel [3,4]. Currently, three vascular-targeted photosensitizers, namely palladium bacteriopheophorbide (TOOKAD ® ), its water-soluble derivative padeliporfin (WST11), and verteporfin (Visudyne ® ), are approved for clinical use [5,6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%