4.7 Review

Research Progress of Nanomedicine-Based Mild Photothermal Therapy in Tumor

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOMEDICINE
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 1433-1468

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S405020

Keywords

nanomedicine; nanotechnology; mild photothermal therapy; tumor therapy

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With the booming development of nanomedicine, mild photothermal therapy (mPTT) has shown great potential in tumor therapy. Compared with traditional PTT, mPTT has fewer side effects and better biological effects. However, the relatively low temperature of mPTT cannot completely eradicate tumors, so efforts have been made to optimize its application in tumor therapy.
With the booming development of nanomedicine, mild photothermal therapy (mPTT, 42-45 degrees C) has exhibited promising potential in tumor therapy. Compared with traditional PTT (>50 degrees C), mPTT has less side effects and better biological effects conducive to tumor treatment, such as loosening the dense structure in tumor tissues, enhancing blood perfusion, and improving the immuno-suppressive microenvironment. However, such a relatively low temperature cannot allow mPTT to completely eradicate tumors, and therefore, substantial efforts have been conducted to optimize the application of mPTT in tumor therapy. This review extensively summarizes the latest advances of mPTT, including two sections: (1) taking mPTT as a leading role to maximize its effect by blocking the cell defense mechanisms, and (2) regarding mPTT as a supporting role to assist other therapies to achieve synergistic antitumor curative effect. Meanwhile, the special characteristics and imaging capabilities of nanoplatforms applied in various therapies are discussed. At last, this paper puts forward the bottlenecks and challenges in the current research path of mPTT, and possible solutions and research directions in future are proposed correspondingly.

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