4.8 Review

Second near-infrared photothermal materials for combinational nanotheranostics

Journal

CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS
Volume 50, Issue 2, Pages 1111-1137

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0cs00664e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Nanyang Technological University [NTU-SUG: M4081627.120]
  2. Singapore Ministry of Education, Academic Research Fund Tier 1 [2017-T1-002-134, 2019-T1-002-045]
  3. Academic Research Fund Tier 2 [MOE2018-T2-2-042]

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Second near-infrared photothermal therapy (NIR-II PTT) has advantages of deeper penetration and less toxicity, but faces challenges of suboptimal photothermal conversion and limited therapeutic efficacy. To improve efficacy, multifunctional NIR-II photothermal inorganic or organic materials have been developed for combination with other therapeutic modalities.
Second near-infrared photothermal therapy (NIR-II PTT, 1000-1500 nm) has recently emerged as a new phototherapeutic modality with the advantages of deeper penetration, less energy dissipation and minimal normal-tissue toxicity over traditional first NIR PTT (750-1000 nm). However, suboptimal photothermal conversion and limited therapeutic efficacy remain the major challenges for NIR-II PTT. With the convergence in materials science, nanomedicine and biology, multifunctional NIR-II photothermal inorganic or organic materials have been extensively developed to combine NIR-II PTT with other therapeutic modalities for improved efficacies in treating life-threatening diseases including cancer and infection. This review summarizes the recent advances of NIR-II photothermal combinational theranostics pertinent to chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiotherapy, and photodynamic, sonodynamic, chemodynamic, gene, gas, ionic, vascular and magnetothermal therapy. Potential obstacles and perspectives for future research and clinical translation of this new theranostic modality are also discussed.

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