Abstract
Radiotherapy is an important treatment for cancer, but it is associated with major side effects due to the high dose of radiation (generally more than 50 Gy). Because radiation’s low acute and late toxicity, many tumors are treated with fractionated radiation in small doses (< 2 Gy). Scintillator X-ray-induced photodynamic therapy is an efficient methodology for cancer management that employs small doses of X-ray irradiation (< 2 Gy) in a complex process. Here we screened pharmaceutical drug intermediates that are derivatives of thioxanthone (TX) and investigated TX-derived organic pharmaceutical molecules that efficiently undergo X-ray-sensitization to populate triplet excitons (singlet oxygen) for cancer therapy when exposed to low-dose X-ray irradiation. By modifying alkoxy side chain substitutions at the 2-position to tune the molecular packing and intermolecular interactions, the fluorescence and room-temperature phosphorescence of a series of TX derivatives were assessed under X-ray irradiation. The ability of these derivatives to generate singlet oxygen and their potential for treating tumors provide new opportunities for developing organic molecules with simple chemical structures, in which large numbers of triplets can be populated directly under ultralow-dose X-ray irradiation.
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