Al's Comment:

Photodynamic therapy for malignant brain tumors involves giving the patient a dye right before surgery and then shining a laser light at the tumor at the time of surgery.  It has been approved in Japan and this article shows that it may increase the time to progression, at least in the treated area, but a lot. There was no control group so we don't know for sure but compared to historic controls, it looks pretty good.

As far as I know, the clinical trials for photodynamic therapy of brain tumors in the USA are completed and we are waiting for the results.


Posted on: 02/21/2016

  Neurol Med Chir (Tokyo). 2016 Feb 16. [Epub ahead of print]
Photodynamic Therapy for Malignant Brain Tumors.
Akimoto J1.
 
Author information:
1Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Medical University.
 
Abstract
 
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) using talaporfin sodium together with a semiconductor laser was approved in Japan in October 2003 as a less invasive therapy for early-stage lung cancer. The author believes that the principle of PDT would be applicable for controlling the invading front of malignant brain tumors and verified its efficacy through experiments using glioma cell lines and glioma xenograft models. An investigator-initiated clinical study was jointly conducted with Tokyo Women's Medical University with the support of the Japan Medical Association. Patient enrollment was started in May 2009 and a total of 27 patients were enrolled by March 2012. Of 22 patients included in efficacy analysis, 13 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma showed progression-free survival of 12 months, progression-free survival at the site of laser irradiation of 20 months, 1-year survival of 100%, and overall survival of 24.8 months. In addition, the safety analysis of the 27 patients showed that adverse events directly related to PDT were mild. PDT was approved in Japan for health insurance coverage as a new intraoperative therapy with the indication for malignant brain tumors in September 2013. Currently, the post-marketing investigation in the accumulated patients has been conducted, and the preparation of guidelines, holding training courses, and dissemination of information on the safe implementation of PDT using web sites and videos, have been promoted. PDT is expected to be a breakthrough for the treatment of malignant glioma as a tumor cell-selective less invasive therapy for the infiltrated functional brain area.
PMID: 26888042 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

 


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