The field can penetrate cancer
cells |
Doctors
may one day be able to use powerful electric fields to help destroy
cancer cells from outside.
US researchers say they can use energy pulses - which last a tiny
fraction of a second - to attack the cell without harming its
healthy neighbours.
The pulses do not physically destroy the cell, but appear to
start a process which makes them "commit suicide".
The technique, reported in New Scientist magazine, could also be
used to tackle obesity, say experts.
Currently, surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy are used to
destroy cancer cells.
The "nanopulse" system is closest to radiotherapy, but may
perhaps offer a gentler alternative to radiation.
Non-invasive
The electric field could in theory be focused on a tumour sited
deep inside the body using antennas placed around the body.
By fine-tuning the frequency of the field, it may be possible to
target only particular cell types, and hopefully spare healthy
tissue around the tumour.
The short duration of the pulses - measured in hundreds of
microseconds - are designed to prevent the outer membrane of the
cell "charging up" fully and acting as a shield for its contents.
Researchers at the University of Southern California at Los
Angeles, and Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, have
shown that, in a laboratory dish at least, "nanopulses" can kill
tumour cells.
The Virginian team has also slowed the growth of tumours in mice
using the technique.
'Reaching in'
Professor Tom Vernier, from the Los Angeles team, said: "The
effects of these pulses are fairly dramatic.
"We see it as reaching into the cell and manipulating internal
structures."
The only detectable physiological change within the cell is a
release of calcium from a structure called the endoplasmic
reticulum.
Although this would not seem to be able to have any direct impact
on whether a cancer cell lives or dies, it is taken as evidence of
the power of the pulse to influence the make-up of the cell.
The Virginia team has also found that they can use the same
method to trigger suicide in cells which can become fat cells -
perhaps offering a technique to help control obesity, they believe.
In the UK, a team at Imperial College London and Loughborough
University is pursuing the same goal.
Dr Michael Kong, from Loughborough, said that the use of electric
fields in this way was a "hot area".
"There are only about three or four groups in the world working
on this, but I would expect others to start when they see the
potential.
"It's an exciting new field - no-one knows exactly how this
effect happens."