Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a promising option for minimal-invasive treatment of bladder cancer. Efficacy of PDT in muscle-invasive urothelial cancer is still hampered by low tissue penetration of most photosensitizers due to short excitation wavelength. The novel light reactive agent tetrahydroporphyrin-tetratosylat (THPTS) is excitable at near-infrared (760 nm), allowing tissue penetration of up to 15 mm. Here, we established an orthotopic rat bladder cancer model and examined the effects of THPTS-PDT on tumor growth in vivo, and analyzed molecular mechanisms in vitro We examined pharmacokinetics and subcellular localization, and evoked cell death mode in cultured rat urothelial carcinoma cells (AY-27). We used female F344 Fischer rats for in vivo studies. Ten rats each were used for THPTS-PDT and light-only control. Bladders were evaluated by macroscopy and histology. Temperature-dependent THPTS uptake resulted in endosomal/lysosomal localization. PDT (0-50 μmol/L THPTS; 10 J/cm2) induced early onset of apoptosis leading to dose-dependent cytotoxicity in AY-27 cells. Single-time transurethral THPTS-PDT (100 μmol/L THPTS; 10 J/cm2) in F344 rats led to significant reduction of muscle-invasive tumor number (2/10 vs. 7/10 in controls) and total tumor volume (60% reduction) 2 weeks after PDT, while sparing healthy tissue. Here, we report for the first time effective tumor growth control by PDT in vivo THPTS is a promising new photosensitizer with the advantage of higher therapeutic depth and the potential of high-selective therapy in muscle-invasive urothelial cancer. This approach possibly allows minimal-invasive bladder preserving treatment of bladder cancer without systemic side effects.

Highlights

  • Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer worldwide [1], with a mortality rate of 2.3 (GLOBOCAN 2012; http://www.globocan.iarc.fr/)

  • Pharmacokinetics, subcellular localization, and cellular effects Cellular uptake of THPTS into rat AY-27 urothelial cancer cells was analyzed by flow cytometry after incubation with 200 mmol/L THPTS at 37C

  • Photodynamic therapy (PDT) could be a promising alternative in bladder preserving treatment of bladder cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer worldwide [1], with a mortality rate of 2.3 (GLOBOCAN 2012; http://www.globocan.iarc.fr/). 70% of cases are initially diagnosed as non–muscle-invasive urothelial carcinomas (stage Ta, T1, CIS) and 30% as muscle-invasive urothelial carcinomas. Non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer is usually treated by transurethral resection of the tumor followed by instillation of Bacillus Calmette–Guerin or chemotherapy, respectively. In highgrade T1 tumors or after failure of first-line therapy, radical. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Online (http://mct.aacrjournals.org/).

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