The aim of the present study was to monitor photodynamic angioocclusion with verteporfin in capillaries. Details of this process
were recorded under a microscope in real-time using a high-sensitivity video camera. A procedure was developed based on intravenous
(i.v.) injection of a light-activated drug, Visudyne
®, into the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) of a 12-day-old chicken embryo. The effect of light activation was probed after
24 h by i.v. injection of a fluorescent dye (FITC dextran), and analysis of its fluorescence distribution. The angioocclusive
effect was graded based on the size of the occluded vessels, and these results were compared with clinical observations. The
time-resolved thrombus formation taking place in a fraction of the field of view was video recorded using a Peltier-cooled
CCD camera. This vessel occlusion in the CAM model was reproducible and, in many ways, similar to that observed in the clinical
use of verteporfin. The real-time video recording permitted the monitoring of platelet aggregation and revealed size-selective
vascular closure as well as some degree of vasoconstriction. Platelets accumulated at intravascular junctions within seconds
after verteporfin light activation, and capillaries were found to be closed 15 min later at the applied conditions. Larger-diameter
vessels remained patent. Repetition of these data with a much more sensitive camera revealed occlusion of the treated area
after 5 min with doses of verteporfin and light similar to those used clinically. Consequently, newly developed light-activated
drugs can now be studied under clinically relevant conditions.
Keywords Choroid - Neovascularization - Photodynamic therapy - Vascular occlusion - Chorioallantoic membrane - CAM model - Verteporfin - Visudyne®