Strong synergy of heat and modulated electromagnetic field in tumor cell killing.

Gabor Andocs, Helmut Renner, Lajos Balogh, Laszlo Fonyad, Csaba Jakab, Andras Szasz

1"Frederic Joliot Curie" National Research Institute for Radiobiology and Radiohygiene, Budapest, Hungary.

Journal Article: Strahlentherapie und Onkologie (impact factor: 3.78). 03/2009; 185(2):120-126. DOI: 10.1007/s00066-009-1903-1

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: : Hyperthermia is an emerging complementary method in radiooncology. Despite many positive studies and comprehensive reviews, the method is not widely accepted as a combination to radiotherapy. Modulated electrohyperthermia (mEHT; capacitive, electric field modulated, 13.56 MHz) has been used in clinical practice for almost 2 decades in Germany, Austria and Hungary. This in vivo study in nude mice xenograft tumors compares mEHT with "classic" radiative hyperthermia (radHT). MATERIAL AND METHODS: : Nude mice were xenografted with HT29 human colorectal carcinoma cells. 28 mice in four groups with seven animals each and two tumors per animal (totally 56 tumors) were included in the present study: group 1 as untreated control; group 2 treated with radHT at 42 degrees C; group 3 treated with mEHT at identical 42 degrees C; group 4 treated with mEHT at 38 degrees C (by intensively cooling down the tumor). 24 h after treatment, animals were sacrificed and the tumor cross sections studied by precise morphological methods for the respective relative amount of "dead" tumor cells. RESULTS: : The effect of mEHT established a double effect as a synergy between the purely thermal (temperature-dependent) and nonthermal (not directly temperature-dependent) effects. The solely thermal enhancement ratio (TER) of cell killing was shown to be 2.9. The field enhancement ratio (FER) at a constant temperature of 42 degrees C was measured as 3.2. Their complex application significantly increased the therapeutic enhancement to 9.4. CONCLUSION: : mEHT had a remarkable cancer cell-killing effect in a nude mice xenograft model.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

42 degrees C
 
clinical practice
 
double effect
 
electric field modulated
 
group 1
 
group 3
 
group 4
 
HT29 human colorectal carcinoma cells
 
intensively cooling
 
Nude mice
 
nude mice xenograft model
 
nude mice xenograft tumors
 
precise morphological methods
 
radiative hyperthermia
 
remarkable cancer cell-killing effect
 
respective relative amount
 
therapeutic enhancement
 
thermal enhancement ratio
 
tumor cells
 
vivo study