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      A “Multi‐Heavy‐Atom” Approach toward Biphotonic Photosensitizers with Improved Singlet‐Oxygen Generation Properties

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          Most cited references69

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          The present and future role of photodynamic therapy in cancer treatment.

          It is more than 25 years since photodynamic therapy (PDT) was proposed as a useful tool in oncology, but the approach is only now being used more widely in the clinic. The understanding of the biology of PDT has advanced, and efficient, convenient, and inexpensive systems of light delivery are now available. Results from well-controlled, randomised phase III trials are also becoming available, especially for treatment of non-melanoma skin cancer and Barrett's oesophagus, and improved photosensitising drugs are in development. PDT has several potential advantages over surgery and radiotherapy: it is comparatively non-invasive, it can be targeted accurately, repeated doses can be given without the total-dose limitations associated with radiotherapy, and the healing process results in little or no scarring. PDT can usually be done in an outpatient or day-case setting, is convenient for the patient, and has no side-effects. Two photosensitising drugs, porfirmer sodium and temoporfin, have now been approved for systemic administration, and aminolevulinic acid and methyl aminolevulinate have been approved for topical use. Here, we review current use of PDT in oncology and look at its future potential as more selective photosensitising drugs become available.
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            BODIPY dyes in photodynamic therapy.

            BODIPY dyes tend to be highly fluorescent, but their emissions can be attenuated by adding substituents with appropriate oxidation potentials. Substituents like these have electrons to feed into photoexcited BODIPYs, quenching their fluorescence, thereby generating relatively long-lived triplet states. Singlet oxygen is formed when these triplet states interact with (3)O(2). In tissues, this causes cell damage in regions that are illuminated, and this is the basis of photodynamic therapy (PDT). The PDT agents that are currently approved for clinical use do not feature BODIPYs, but there are many reasons to believe that this situation will change. This review summarizes the attributes of BODIPY dyes for PDT, and in some related areas.
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              Singlet oxygen: there is indeed something new under the sun.

              Singlet oxygen, O(2)(a(1)Delta(g)), the lowest excited electronic state of molecular oxygen, has been known to the scientific community for approximately 80 years. It has a characteristic chemistry that sets it apart from the triplet ground state of molecular oxygen, O(2)(X(3)Sigma), and is important in fields that range from atmospheric chemistry and materials science to biology and medicine. For such a "mature citizen", singlet oxygen nevertheless remains at the cutting-edge of modern science. In this critical review, recent work on singlet oxygen is summarized, focusing primarily on systems that involve light. It is clear that there is indeed still something new under the sun (243 references).
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chemistry – A European Journal
                Chem. Eur. J.
                Wiley
                0947-6539
                1521-3765
                June 14 2019
                July 05 2019
                May 30 2019
                July 05 2019
                : 25
                : 38
                : 9026-9034
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Laboratoire de Chimie de l'ENS de Lyon, Univ Lyon, ENS de Lyon, CNRS UMR 5182Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 69342 Lyon France
                [2 ]INSERM, U1209Université Grenoble Alpes, IAB 38000 Grenoble France
                [3 ]UFR des Sciences et TechniquesUniv Brest, UMR CNRS-UBO 6521 CEMCA, IBSAM 6 avenue Victor le Gorgeu, C.S. 93837 29238 Brest, Cedex 3 France
                [4 ]Univ. LyonInstitut Lumière Matière, UMR 5306 CNRS-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 10 rue Ada Byron 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex France
                [5 ]NanoMedSyn 34093 Montpellier France
                [6 ]Faculté de PharmacieInstitut de Biomolécules Max Mousseron, UMR 5247 CNRS-UM 15 Avenue Charles Flahault 34093 Montpellier Cedex 05 France
                Article
                10.1002/chem.201901047
                30972809
                639f8439-630f-4a63-9805-9404079d92cc
                © 2019

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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