Radio-wave therapy proves effective against liver cancer cells

Radio-wave therapy proves effective against liver cancer cells


A new targeted therapy using non-thermal radio waves has been shown to block the growth of liver cancer cells anywhere in the body without damaging healthy cells, according to a study conducted by scientists. The study findings are published in the journal EBioMedicine, a Lancet publication.

Using animal models, the research team delivered levels of radio frequencies to mice that had been injected with human cancer cells to replicate hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common type of liver cancer. The radio frequencies were the same as those delivered to patients with HCC in Europe where the device has been approved for use in people.

"Our study showed that the radiofrequency delivered was at low and safe levels," the senior author said. "It was actually lower than those generated by holding a cell phone close to the ear."

The research team utilized a device, invented by Pasche and Alexandre Barbault, of TheraBionic GmbH in Ettlingen, Germany, that delivered cancer-specific, amplitude-modulated radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (AM RF EMF) programmed specifically for HCC. The AM RF EMF activated a calcium channel on the surface of HCC tumor cells but not on noncancerous cells, the senior author said.

"We discovered that a specific calcium channel, Cav3.2, was acting like an antenna for the radio signals we sent out, which allowed calcium to penetrate the HCC cell membrane and go into the cell, triggering HCC growth arrest," the senior author said.

"Our team found it was the influx of calcium that stopped the growth of HCC cells and shrunk, and in some cases eliminated, the tumors. This effect was the same even if the cancer had metastasized to other parts of the body."

The team's next step will be to identify the exact signaling cascade within the tumor cell that leads to the anti-cancer effects, the author said.

A separate study by Wake Forest Baptist researchers using the same technology with breast cancer cells also is published in the in EBioMedicine.

The device, which is licensed to TheraBionic Inc., formerly TheraBionic LLC, and TheraBionic GmbH, has been approved by the European Notified Body, the equivalent of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). It is currently under review by the FDA.

The treatment, which is approved for use in patients in Europe, consists of a hand-held device about the size of a VHS tape cassette that emits radio frequencies via a spoon-shaped element that is placed on the patient's tongue. The treatment is administered at the patient's home three times a day for one hour. The frequencies used are specific to the patient's type of cancer as identified through tumor biopsies or blood work, the author said.

The authors have discovered radio frequencies for 15 different types of cancer, as previously reported in a study published in 2009 in the Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research.

https://newsroom.wakehealth.edu/News-Releases/2019/05/Radio-wave-Therapy-Proves-Effective-Against-Liver-Cancer-Cells

https://www.ebiomedicine.com/article/S2352-3964(19)30342-1/fulltext

http://sciencemission.com/site/index.php?page=news&type=view&id=health-science%2Ftumour-specific&filter=8%2C9%2C10%2C11%2C12%2C13%2C14%2C16%2C17%2C18%2C19%2C20%2C27&redirected=1

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