In what
a dying Rick Smalley called the most important application from his
Nobel Prize-winning discovery [of fullerines], Houston researchers are
using [carbon] nanotubes heated by radio waves to kill cancer cells. In a
paper posted online by the journal Cancer, a team at the University of
Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center and Rice University reported that the
technique destroyed liver cancer tumors in rabbits and caused no side
effects. It is thought to hold the same potential for many other
cancers. "I don't want to overstate matters — I'm the biggest skeptic in
the world — given the challenges still ahead of us," Dr. Steven Curley,
an M.D. Anderson surgical oncologist and the paper's senior author,
said Thursday. "But my hope is that this will be a very useful tool to
safely and efficiently treat a lot of types of cancer." The therapy
marries two disparate disciplines: the relatively ancient field of radio
waves and nanotechnology, the cutting-edge science of the ultra-small.
The rabbit study found the therapy worked only when the two were used
together. It works not by poisoning but by creating a localized
hyperthermia — or small fever — that destroys the cancer cells'
membranes, protein and even DNA. The cells then die and are carried out
of the body through normal kidney functions. In the experiment recounted
in Cancer, the rabbits were injected with a solution of
single-walled carbon nanotubes — hollow cylinders of pure carbon
measuring about a billionth of a meter across — then exposed to two
minutes of radio-frequency treatment. The result, researchers said, was
the thermal destruction of 100 percent of the tumors. The idea
was inspired by John Kanzius, an M.D. Anderson leukemia patient and
retired Pennsylvania radio and television station owner. He developed a
radio-frequency generator after undergoing chemotherapy and noting its
effect on himself and other patients.
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