In-vitro use of 5-ALA for photodynamic therapy in pediatric brain tumors

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Abstract

BACKGROUND Light irradiation (635 nm) of cells containing protoporphyrin IX (PPIX) after 5- aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) pretreatment causes cell death via different pathways including apoptosis and necrosis, as previously demonstrated for malignant glioma cells. OBJECTIVE To elucidate whether various malignant pediatric brain tumors, which have been shown to accumulate PPIX, would also be susceptible to photodynamic therapy (PDT). METHODS Medulloblastoma (DAOY, UW228), pNET (PFSK-1), and rhabdoid tumor (BT16) cell lines were incubated with 5-ALA in variable concentrations for 4 h. Consequently, cells were irradiated by 635 nm diode laser light. After 12 h, cell viability was measured by WST-1 testing and these results were compared to control cells incubated with 5-ALA without irradiation or irradiation only without prior incubation with 5-ALA. RESULTS We demonstrated significant cell death in malignant pediatric tumor cells after incubation with 5-ALA and laser irradiation in comparison to control groups. In all cell lines, we noticed significant cell death above a 5-ALA concentration of 50 μg/ml (P

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Schwake, M., Nemes, A., Dondrop, J., Schroeteler, J., Schipmann, S., Senner, V., … Ewelt, C. (2018). In-vitro use of 5-ALA for photodynamic therapy in pediatric brain tumors. Clinical Neurosurgery, 83(6), 1328–1335. https://doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyy054

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