Chlorin Conjugates in Photodynamic Chemotherapy for Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
Meden F. Isaac-Lam

TL;DR
This study explores combining photodynamic therapy with chemotherapy to treat triple-negative breast cancer, showing promising results in killing cancer cells.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the development of ternary combination therapies using chlorin conjugates and chemotherapeutic agents for enhanced tumor cell death in TNBC.
Findings
The indium complex of chlorin–lipoic acid conjugate with taxol showed strong synergism at nanomolar concentrations under light.
Chlorin–pantothenic acid and chlorin–biotin conjugates with taxol also demonstrated synergistic anti-tumor effects.
Fluorescence and TEM imaging confirmed apoptosis as the primary mode of cell death in treated cells.
Abstract
Breast cancer (BC) is the most common type of cancer in women and the number of new cases in the US is still increasing each year. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), which comprises 15–20% of all breast cancer, is a heterogeneous disease and is considered the most aggressive type of breast cancer due to the lack of estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) expressions for treatments. Traditional chemotherapy is the standard protocol for the treatment of TNBC. Toxicity and multidrug resistance are major drawbacks to chemotherapy. The lack of molecular targets and poor prognosis for TNBC prompts an urgent need to discover novel therapeutic strategies to improve clinical outcomes and quality of life for patients. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) or light treatment is a binary anti-cancer procedure that uses a photosensitizer (PS)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmployment, Labor, and Gender Studies
