Carbon nanotube‐enhanced thermal destruction of cancer cells in a noninvasive radiofrequency field

Abstract
BACKGROUND. Single‐walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) have remarkable physicochemical properties that may have several medical applications. The authors have discovered a novel property of SWNTs—heat release in a radiofrequency (RF) field—that they hypothesized may be used to produce thermal cytotoxicity in malignant cells. METHODS. Functionalized, water‐soluble SWNTs were exposed to a noninvasive, 13.56‐megahertz RF field, and heating characteristics were measured with infrared thermography. Three human cancer cell lines were incubated with various concentrations of SWNTs and then treated in the RF field. Cytotoxicity was measured by fluorescence‐activated cell sorting. Hepatic VX2 tumors in rabbits were injected with SWNTs or with control solutions and were treated in the RF field. Tumors were harvested 48 hours later to assess viability. RESULTS. The RF field induced efficient heating of aqueous suspensions of SWNTs. This phenomenon was used to produce a noninvasive, selective, and SWNT concentration‐dependent thermal destruction in vitro of human cancer cells that contained internalized SWNTs. Direct intratumoral injection of SWNTs in vivo followed by immediate RF field treatment was tolerated well by rabbits bearing hepatic VX2 tumors. At 48 hours, all SWNT‐treated tumors demonstrated complete necrosis, whereas control tumors that were treated with RF without SWNTs remained completely viable. Tumors that were injected with SWNTs but were not treated with RF also were viable. CONCLUSIONS. The current results suggested that SWNTs targeted to cancer cells may allow noninvasive RF field treatments to produce lethal thermal injury to the malignant cells. Now, the authors are developing SWNTs coupled with cancer cell‐targeting agents to enhance SWNT uptake by cancer cells while limiting uptake by normal cells. Cancer 2007. © 2007 American Cancer Society.
Funding Information
  • American Association of Cancer Research Littlefield Grant
  • National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Alliance for NanoHealth
  • National Science Foundation
  • Center for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology
  • Fulbright Foundation