CNRS: The mechanical resistance of tumors and collateral damage of standard treatments often hinder efforts to defeat cancers. However, a team of researchers from the CNRS, the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM), Paris Descartes University, and Paris Diderot University has successfully softened malignant tumors by heating them. This method, called nanohyperthermia, makes the tumors more vulnerable to therapeutic agents. First, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are directly injected into the tumors. Then, laser irradiation activates the nanotubes, while the surrounding healthy tissue remains intact. The team's work was published on January 1 in Theranostics.
Researchers are increasingly turning their attention to the mechanical
factors affecting tumor development. Tumors stiffen due to the abnormal
organization of the collagen fibers and extracellular matrix (ECM) that
hold cells from the same tissue together. In addition to being a marker
of malignancy, such stiffening may help cancer cells proliferate and
metastasize. Furthermore, the ECM forms a physical barrier that limits
tumor penetration by therapeutic agents. Various treatments attempt to
disrupt the structure of tumors but are double-edged swords: as ECM is
common to tumors and healthy organs, degrading it does as much harm as
good.
Yet the team found a way around this problem for mouse
tumors. After being directly injected into the tumors, CNTs were
activated with near-infrared light. The laser only acts on areas of CNT
concentration, heating them up. The researchers monitored tumor
stiffness noninvasively using ultrasound shear wave elastography. This
technique uses the shear or secondary wave produced by ultrasound to map
tissue elasticity. In two consecutive sessions at a day's interval, the
tumors were exposed to nanohyperthermia, or localized heating to 52 °C
for a duration of 3 minutes. Tumors initially became more rigid before
gradually softening over the 10 days or so that followed the procedure.
Nanohyperthermia denatures collagen fibers locally and reduces the
rigidity and volume of tumors over the long term. It disrupts the tumor
microenvironment and may prove effective as an adjuvant treatment with
chemotherapy.
The members of the team hail from the Laboratoire matière et systèmes complexes (CNRS, Paris Diderot University)1,
the Cochin Institute (CNRS, INSERM, Paris Descartes University), the
Laboratoire d'immunopathologie et chimie thérapeutique (CNRS), and the
Langevin Institute (CNRS, ESPCI Paris).