AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores using a new formulation, High hypericin-loaded polyvinylpyrrolidone (HHL-PVP), to enhance the diagnosis and treatment of brain tumors, specifically glioblastomas, through fluorescence imaging.
  • Researchers tested a CMOS camera system with specific filters to differentiate hypericin from a common dye (5-ALA) used in brain surgery, successfully demonstrating the ability to visualize hypericin in tumor tissues.
  • Results showed that HHL-PVP significantly increased fluorescence intensity and lifetime, indicating high diagnostic sensitivity (87.5%) and perfect specificity (100%) for identifying treated glioblastoma specimens, suggesting potential for future clinical applications.

Article Abstract

Background: High hypericin-loaded polyvinylpyrrolidone (HHL-PVP) constitutes a novel approach to utilize the promising characteristics of hypericin for photodynamic diagnosis (PDD) and therapy (PDT) of brain tumors in an orally bioavailable formulation. The aim of this study was to investigate the ability of a Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) camera-based fluorescence imaging system to selectively visualize HHL-PVP in glioblastoma tissue even in the presence of 5-Aminolvevulinic acid (5-ALA) induced fluorescence, which is widely utilized in brain tumor surgery.

Methods: We applied a previously established system with a non-hypericin specific filter for 5-ALA fluorescence visualization and a newly introduced hypericin-specific filter at 575-615 nm that transmits the spectrum of hypericin, but not 5-ALA fluorescence. Glioblastoma specimens obtained from 12 patients (11 with preoperative 5-ALA intake) were ex vivo incubated with HHL-PVP. Subsequently, fluorescence intensity and lifetime changes using both the non-hypericin specific filter and hypericin-specific filter were measured before and after HHL-PVP incubation and after subsequent rinsing.

Results: While no significant differences in fluorescence signal were observed using the non-hypericin specific filter, statistically significant increases in fluorescence intensity ( = 0.001) and lifetime ( = 0.028) after HHL-PVP incubation were demonstrated using the hypericin-specific filter. In consequence, specimens treated with HHL-PVP could be identified according to the fluorescence signal with high diagnostic sensitivity (87.5%) and specificity (100%).

Conclusions: Our CMOS camera-based system with a hypericin-specific filter is capable of selectively visualizing hypericin fluorescence in glioblastoma tissue after ex vivo HHL-PVP incubation. In the future, this technique could facilitate clinical investigations of HHL-PVP for PDD and PDT while maintaining the current standard of care with 5-ALA guidance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11545445PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14212423DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores using a new formulation, High hypericin-loaded polyvinylpyrrolidone (HHL-PVP), to enhance the diagnosis and treatment of brain tumors, specifically glioblastomas, through fluorescence imaging.
  • Researchers tested a CMOS camera system with specific filters to differentiate hypericin from a common dye (5-ALA) used in brain surgery, successfully demonstrating the ability to visualize hypericin in tumor tissues.
  • Results showed that HHL-PVP significantly increased fluorescence intensity and lifetime, indicating high diagnostic sensitivity (87.5%) and perfect specificity (100%) for identifying treated glioblastoma specimens, suggesting potential for future clinical applications.
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