Open Access
11 June 2020 Minimal required PDT light dosimetry for nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer
Lothar D. Lilge, Jenny Wu, Yiwen Xu, Angelica Manalac, Daniel Molenhuis, Fynn Schwiegelshohn, Leonid Vesselov, Wayne Embree, Michael Nesbitt, Vaughn Betz, Arkady Mandel, Michael A. S. Jewett, Girish S. Kulkarni
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Abstract

Significance: Photodynamic therapy (PDT) could become a treatment option for nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer when the current high morbidity rate associated with red light PDT and variable PDT dose can be overcome through a combination of intravesical instillation of the photosensitizer and the use of green light creating a steep PDT dose gradient.

Aim: To determine how a high PDT selectivity can be maintained throughout the bladder wall considering other efficacy determining parameters, in particular, the average optical properties of the mucosal layer governing the fluence rate multiplication factor, as well as the bladder shape and the position of the emitter in relationship to the bladder wall.

Approach: We present three irradiance monitoring systems and evaluate their ability to enable selective bladder PDT considering previously determined photodynamic threshold values for the bladder cancer, mucosa and urothelium in a preclinical model, and the photosensitizer’s specific uptake ratio. Monte Carlo-based light propagation simulations performed for six human bladders at the time of therapy for a range of tissue optical properties. The performance of one irradiance sensing device in a clinical phase 1B trial is presented to underline the impact of irradiance monitoring, and it is compared to the Monte Carlo-derived dose surface histogram.

Results: Monte Carlo simulations showed that irradiance monitoring systems need to comprise at least three sensors. Light scattering inside the bladder void needs to be minimized to prevent increased heterogeneity of the irradiance. The dose surface histograms vary significantly depending on the bladder shape and bladder volume but are less dependent on tissue optical properties.

Conclusions: We demonstrate the need for adequate irradiance monitoring independent of a photosensitizer’s specific uptake ratio.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Lothar D. Lilge, Jenny Wu, Yiwen Xu, Angelica Manalac, Daniel Molenhuis, Fynn Schwiegelshohn, Leonid Vesselov, Wayne Embree, Michael Nesbitt, Vaughn Betz, Arkady Mandel, Michael A. S. Jewett, and Girish S. Kulkarni "Minimal required PDT light dosimetry for nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer," Journal of Biomedical Optics 25(6), 068001 (11 June 2020). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.25.6.068001
Received: 22 February 2020; Accepted: 27 May 2020; Published: 11 June 2020
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CITATIONS
Cited by 16 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Bladder

Photodynamic therapy

Sensors

Tissue optics

Optical properties

Bladder cancer

Natural surfaces

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