Affiliation:
1. Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China
2. University of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, OK, USA
3. University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA
4. Wound Healing of Oklahoma Inc., Oklahoma City, OK, USA
5. University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA
Abstract
Laser immunotherapy (LI) has been demonstrated to be a promising modality for cancer treatment. The present study was designed to further investigate the impact of LI combined with surgery. LI consists of a near-infrared laser, a light-absorbing dye (indocyanine green, ICG), and an immunostimulant (glycated chitosan, GC). ICG and GC were intratumorally injected, followed by laser irradiation. Female BALB/c mice bearing EMT6 tumor cells were divided into 4 groups: control, LI, LI followed by immediate surgery resection of residual tumor (LI + S0wk), and LI followed by surgical removal of residual tumor after 1 week (LI + S1wk). Successfully treated mice from all treatment groups were rechallenged twice with 105 and 5 × 105 EMT6 cells, respectively. The LI + S1wk group had the highest survival rate (72%) after 90 days, whereas the mice survival rates of the LI + S0wk, LI, and control groups were 50%, 46%, 0%, respectively. The median survival times of control, LI, LI + S0wk, and LI + S1wk groups were 32, 66, 74, and 90 days, respectively. Survival rates of the treated mice after the first and second tumor rechallenges, ranging from 73% to 95%, were not significantly different among the 4 groups ( P > .05). The results show that LI is a useful tool for the treatment of tumor-bearing mice. Long-term antitumor effect can be induced by LI. They also indicate that combination of LI with surgery can further improve the therapeutic efficiency of LI.
Subject
Complementary and alternative medicine,Oncology
Cited by
9 articles.
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