Cancers (Aug 2021)

A Warp-Knitted Light-Emitting Fabric-Based Device for In Vitro Photodynamic Therapy: Description, Characterization, and Application on Human Cancer Cell Lines

  • Elise Thécua,
  • Laurine Ziane,
  • Guillaume Paul Grolez,
  • Alexandre Fagart,
  • Abhishek Kumar,
  • Bertrand Leroux,
  • Gregory Baert,
  • Pascal Deleporte,
  • Maximilien Vermandel,
  • Anne-Sophie Vignion-Dewalle,
  • Nadira Delhem,
  • Serge Mordon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13164109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 16
p. 4109

Abstract

Read online

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) appears to be a promising strategy in biomedical applications. However, the complexity of its parameters prevents wide acceptance. This work presents and characterizes a novel optical device based on knitted light-emitting fabrics and dedicated to in vitro PDT involving low irradiance over a long illumination period. Technical characterization of this device, called CELL-LEF, is performed. A cytotoxic study of 5-ALA-mediated PDT on human cancer cell lines is provided as a proof of concept. The target of delivering an irradiance of 1 mW/cm2 over 750 cm2 is achieved (mean: 0.99 mW/cm2; standard deviation: 0.13 mW/cm2). The device can maintain a stable temperature with the mean thermal distribution of 35.1 °C (min: 30.7 °C; max: 38.4 °C). In vitro outcomes show that 5-ALA PDT using CELL-LEF consistently and effectively induced a decrease in tumor cell viability: Almost all the HepG2 cells died after 80 min of illumination, while less than 60% of U87 cell viability remained. CELL-LEF is suitable for in vitro PDT involving low irradiance over a long illumination period.

Keywords