The Application of Photodynamic Therapy in the Head and Neck

From Volume 34, Issue 8, October 2007 | Pages 478-486

Authors

Waseem Jerjes

Clinical Teaching Fellow, NMLC and Department of Surgery, Royal Free and UCMS, Clinical Fellow, Head & Neck Unit and UCLH, Lecturer, UOMFS, Eastman and UCL

Articles by Waseem Jerjes

Tahwinder Upile

Surgical Fellow, Royal National ENT Hospital, Lecturer, UOMFS, Eastman and UCL

Articles by Tahwinder Upile

Christian S Betz

Clinical Fellow, Head & Neck Unit and UCLH

Articles by Christian S Betz

Mohammed El Maaytah

Lecturer, UOMFS, Eastman and UCL, Registrar, Head & Neck Unit and UCLH

Articles by Mohammed El Maaytah

Syedda Abbas

Registrar, Head & Neck Unit and UCLH

Articles by Syedda Abbas

Anthony Wright

Professor of Otolaryngology, the Royal National ENT Hospital and UCLH

Articles by Anthony Wright

Colin Hopper

Head, UOMFS, Eastman and UCL, Consultant Surgeon/Senior Lecturer, Head & Neck Unit and UCLH, Senior Research Fellow, NMLC and Department of Surgery, Royal Free and UCMS

Articles by Colin Hopper

Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is considered to be a minimally invasive treatment modality which shows great promise in premalignant and malignant conditions of the head and neck. This therapy can be applied before or after any of the conventional treatment modalities (ie surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy) and the treatment can be repeated as much as is needed at the same site. PDT uses photosensitizing drugs that are activated by exposure to light of a specific wavelength. Illumination of the suspected premalignant or malignant site by light at the activating wavelength results in cellular destruction by a non-free radical oxidative process.

Most photosensitizers are administered systemically, although some can be applied topically in the treatment of skin cancer. Recent developments in photosensitizers and light delivery systems have substantially reduced treatment times and residual photosensitivity, while increasing the achievable depth of necrosis. Compared with standard approaches, PDT can achieve equivalent or greater efficacy in the treatment of premalignant and malignant lesions in the head and neck, with greatly reduced morbidity and disfigurement.

The technique is simple, can commonly be carried out in outpatient clinics, and is highly acceptable to patients. It can be repeated to debulk large tumours progressively, and it can also be applied through interstitial light delivery to large solid tumours.

Article