What the study found
A single-fiber, multifunctional fiber-optic theranostic probe was developed for closed-loop tumor photothermal therapy. It combines tumor edge identification, treatment, and real-time feedback in one tapered optical fiber.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say this approach addresses limited light penetration depth and the systemic toxicity of nanomaterials. They also conclude that modular wavelength assignment could support customizable minimally invasive interventions and feedback monitoring.
What the researchers tested
The researchers proposed single-fiber multifunctional integration using wavelength division multiplexing, which separates functions by using non-overlapping excitation bands. As a proof of concept, they co-immobilized a pH indicator, a temperature indicator, and a photothermal agent onto the surface of a tapered optical fiber.
What worked and what didn't
Before treatment, the probe could identify tumor edges by revealing the tumor pH gradient. During treatment, the photothermal agent converted optical energy into heat, and simultaneous temperature monitoring enabled thermal dose control. After treatment, real-time monitoring of the reversal of the acidic tumor microenvironment allowed rapid efficacy assessment, and animal experiments showed good therapeutic efficacy and biocompatibility.
What to keep in mind
The abstract presents this as a proof-of-concept study, so the scope is limited to the described setup and animal experiments. It does not provide detailed limitations beyond that in the available summary.
Key points
- The study developed a single-fiber fiber-optic theranostic probe for closed-loop tumor photothermal therapy.
- The probe combined a pH indicator, a temperature indicator, and a photothermal agent with non-overlapping excitation bands.
- The probe could identify tumor edges before treatment by revealing a tumor pH gradient.
- During treatment, temperature monitoring supported thermal dose control while the photothermal agent converted optical energy into heat.
- Animal experiments validated therapeutic efficacy and biocompatibility.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Single-fiber probe enables closed-loop tumor photothermal therapy
- Authors:
- Li Z, Li Z, Zhongyuan Cheng, Claudia Borri, Ambra Giannetti, Ni Lan, Junqiu Long, Wenwei Chen, Xiang‐Ran Cai, J G Yang, Bing Guan, Francesco Chiavaioli, Ran Yang
- Institutions:
- Jinan University, First Affiliated Hospital of Jinan University, Nello Carrara Institute of Applied Physics
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-27
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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