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An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers

Melanoma is a form of skin cancer, arising from epidermal cells of the melanocyte lineage, which undergo a series of transformations and genetic alterations that may give rise to both pigmented and unpigmented melanoma. Melanoma represents 4% of all skin cancers but due to its aggressive nature, it...

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Main Author: Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin
Other Authors: Davids, Lester M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Human Biology 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin
author2 Davids, Lester M
author_browse Davids, Lester M
Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin
author_facet Davids, Lester M
Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin
author_sort Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin
collection Thesis
description Melanoma is a form of skin cancer, arising from epidermal cells of the melanocyte lineage, which undergo a series of transformations and genetic alterations that may give rise to both pigmented and unpigmented melanoma. Melanoma represents 4% of all skin cancers but due to its aggressive nature, it accounts for 80% of death among skin cancer patients. South Africa has a melanoma incidence rate that is second worldwide to only Australia. In melanoma; non-metastatic primary tumours are treated by surgical resection. However, metastatic melanoma is highly resistant to conventional radio and chemotherapy, thus reducing the median life of patient's diagnosis with the metastatic form to about 7-9months. Given the implications of the pigment in failure of chemotherapy, two human metastatic pigmented and unpigmented melanoma cell lines were used to investigate the mechanisms underlying chemo-resistance. During the course of this study, the first aim was to determine the concentration of the chemotherapeutic drug dacarbazine (DTIC) causing fifty percent decrease in melanoma cell viability (LD50), then to investigate the possible synergism of hypericin activated-photodynamic therapy in reducing (HYP-PDT) melanoma cell viability, when combined with chemotherapy. In addition we wanted to assess the morphology and the clonogenic capacity of the melanoma cells, after the different treatments and further investigate the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters (ABCB5/1 & ABCG2) expression profile, before and after chemotherapeutic (DTIC) and combination therapy (DTIC+HYP-PDT) treatments.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:45.395Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Human Biology
publisherStr Department of Human Biology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14133 An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin Davids, Lester M Cell Biology Melanoma is a form of skin cancer, arising from epidermal cells of the melanocyte lineage, which undergo a series of transformations and genetic alterations that may give rise to both pigmented and unpigmented melanoma. Melanoma represents 4% of all skin cancers but due to its aggressive nature, it accounts for 80% of death among skin cancer patients. South Africa has a melanoma incidence rate that is second worldwide to only Australia. In melanoma; non-metastatic primary tumours are treated by surgical resection. However, metastatic melanoma is highly resistant to conventional radio and chemotherapy, thus reducing the median life of patient's diagnosis with the metastatic form to about 7-9months. Given the implications of the pigment in failure of chemotherapy, two human metastatic pigmented and unpigmented melanoma cell lines were used to investigate the mechanisms underlying chemo-resistance. During the course of this study, the first aim was to determine the concentration of the chemotherapeutic drug dacarbazine (DTIC) causing fifty percent decrease in melanoma cell viability (LD50), then to investigate the possible synergism of hypericin activated-photodynamic therapy in reducing (HYP-PDT) melanoma cell viability, when combined with chemotherapy. In addition we wanted to assess the morphology and the clonogenic capacity of the melanoma cells, after the different treatments and further investigate the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters (ABCB5/1 & ABCG2) expression profile, before and after chemotherapeutic (DTIC) and combination therapy (DTIC+HYP-PDT) treatments. 2015-09-30T13:43:33Z 2015-09-30T13:43:33Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Med) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14133 eng application/pdf Department of Human Biology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Cell Biology
Nsole Biteghe, Fleury Augustin
An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
title_full An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
title_fullStr An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
title_short An investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
title_sort investigation into the synergistic action of chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in resistant skin cancers
topic Cell Biology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14133
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