As the PDT and light-based therapy market matures and expands to different in vivo indications, the prevailing challenge that is emerging is delivering light to the right part of the body with sufficient strength and specificity to achieve the intended therapeutic effect on the target while sparing surrounding tissues.
“We have focused on EVLP precisely to get around the issue of delivering the light into the body,” says Feld. “However, for some light-based therapies, novel delivery systems will be required to deliver adequate and appropriate light inside the body and to do so in a focused manner to avoid causing off-target toxicity.”
This is a particular issue in the treatment of cancerous tumours in internal organs with PDT, especially the lungs, oesophagus and other organs that tend to move and are more difficult to expose to consistent light. Innovations in devices are helping to address this problem, as demonstrated last year by a pioneering piece of research in Japan.
Researchers at Waseda University, led by associate professor of biomedical engineering Dr Toshinori Fujie (who has since moved to the Tokyo Institute of Technology), developed a novel wirelessly-powered light-emitting device that could greatly improve the specificity of light-based cancer therapy, especially when targeting delicate organs.
The device can be stably fixed to the inner surface of a tissue between layers of bioadhesive and elastic nanosheets, the latter of which were inspired by the proteins used by mussels to clamp on to objects. This allows the wirelessly-powered LED chips in the device to concentrate steady, localised light on the tumour. The system has been tested on tumour-bearing mice, with exposure to green light proving particularly damaging to tumours.
“This device may facilitate treatment for hard-to-detect microtumours and deeply located lesions that are hard to reach with standard phototherapy, without having to worry about the risk of damaging healthy tissues by overheating,” Fujie said. “Furthermore, because the device does not require surgical suturing, it is suitable for treating cancer near major nerves and blood vessels, as well as for organs that are fragile, that change their shape, or that actively move, such as the brain, liver, and pancreas.”
It’s clear that the therapeutic journey of PDT and other light-based therapies is only just beginning, despite their long history in clinical practice. Innovations and device design and biomechanical engineering are helping to develop PDT applications in oncology, infectious disease, ophthalmology, dermatology and more. A great deal of research and clinical testing lies ahead, but it may not be too much longer before some of the toughest-to-treat medical conditions are tackled by putting them under the spotlight.