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Emerging photodynamic/sonodynamic therapies for urological cancers: progress and challenges

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-022-01637-w

Keywords

Nanobiotechnology; Photodynamic therapy; Sonodynamic therapy; Urological cancers; Cancer therapy; Clinical translation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11905161]
  2. Hubei Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [2021CFB040]
  3. Health Commission of Hubei Province scientific research project [WJ2021Q041]
  4. Program of Excellent Doctoral (Postdoctoral) of Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University [ZNYB2020026, ZNYB2019016]

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Photodynamic therapy (PDT) and sonodynamic therapy (SDT) have been developed to treat solid tumors, and they are particularly suitable for urological tumors. With the advancement of nanobiotechnology, new photo/sonosensitizers have significant advantages over traditional ones, offering great potential for cancer treatment. Clinical trials and multidisciplinary participation are needed for the clinical translation of these promising photo/sonosensitizers.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT), and sonodynamic therapy (SDT) that developed from PDT, have been studied for decades to treat solid tumors. Compared with other deep tumors, the accessibility of urological tumors (e.g., bladder tumor and prostate tumor) makes them more suitable for PDT/SDT that requires exogenous stimulation. Due to the introduction of nanobiotechnology, emerging photo/sonosensitizers modified with different functional components and improved physicochemical properties have many outstanding advantages in cancer treatment compared with traditional photo/sonosensitizers, such as alleviating hypoxia to improve quantum yield, passive/active tumor targeting to increase drug accumulation, and combination with other therapeutic modalities (e.g., chemotherapy, immunotherapy and targeted therapy) to achieve synergistic therapy. As WST11 (TOOKAD (R) soluble) is currently clinically approved for the treatment of prostate cancer, emerging photo/sonosensitizers have great potential for clinical translation, which requires multidisciplinary participation and extensive clinical trials. Herein, the latest research advances of newly developed photo/sonosensitizers for the treatment of urological cancers, and the efficacy, as well as potential biological effects, are highlighted. In addition, the clinical status of PDT/SDT for urological cancers is presented, and the optimization of the photo/sonosensitizer development procedure for clinical translation is discussed.

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