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Selective hyperthermia using magnetoliposomes to target cervical lymph node metastasis in a rabbit tongue tumor model
Author(s) -
Hamaguchi Shigeaki,
Tohnai Iwai,
Ito Akira,
Mitsudo Kenji,
Shigetomi Toshio,
Ito Masafumi,
Honda Hiroyuki,
Kobayashi Takeshi,
Ueda Minoru
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
cancer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.035
H-Index - 141
eISSN - 1349-7006
pISSN - 1347-9032
DOI - 10.1111/j.1349-7006.2003.tb01527.x
Subject(s) - hyperthermia , tongue , lymph , necrosis , tunel assay , lymph node , medicine , spleen , metastasis , apoptosis , pathology , cancer , urology , nuclear medicine , chemistry , immunohistochemistry , biochemistry
The effect of hyperthermia on cervical lymph node metastasis of VX7 tongue cancer in female Japanese white rabbits was investigated. Magnetoliposomes (MLs) with a neutral surface charge and a size of 94.1 nm were used as heating mediators. MLs were injected into the tongue 20 days after tumor transplantation, and we examined whether they reached the metastatic deep cervical lymph node. The highest magnetite concentration 24 h after ML injection was detected in the lymph node, followed by tongue, spleen, blood, and liver. Rabbits were separated into three groups: group I as the control; group II with ML injection alone; and group III with ML injection and hyperthermia 24 h after ML injection, generated by applying an alternating magnetic field (118 kHz, 384 Oe) to the neck region. The hyperthermic effect was evaluated in terms of the percentage of necrosis in proportion to the metastatic tumor and the apoptotic index (AI), defined as the ratio of TUNEL‐positive cells. The temperature of lymph nodes in group III reached over 44°C. The mean area of necrosis in group III was 58.0%, which was significantly higher than that in group I (19.6%) or group II (20.4%). The AI in group III was 22.9%, significantly higher than in group I (1.67%) or II (1.42%). The difference between group I and II was not statistically significant. Group III tumor sites around MLs showed necrosis or apoptosis‐positive cells induced by hyperthermia. These results indicate that MLs injected into the tongue can target cervical lymph node metastases and accumulate there at concentrations sufficient to generate therapeutically effective temperatures.

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