Thursday 21 August 2008

Biomedical Foundation Supports Technology Aimed At Destroying Cancer Cells

�A raw technology, exploitation electric pulses to put down cancer tissue paper and named by NASA Tech Briefs as one of septet key technological breakthroughs of 2007, is receiving additional support aimed at moving the subroutine to the marketplace. One of its lead developers, Rafael V. Davalos, a faculty member of the Virginia Tech-Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences (SBES) hTTP://www.sbes.vt.edu, received a $240,000 grant from the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation and $25,000 from the Wake Forest Comprehensive Cancer Center.


Davalos' grant from Coulter is an Early Career Translational Research Award in Biomedical Engineering. This early career awards program provides financing for helper professors in established biomedical engineering departments within North America. The award seeks to support biomedical inquiry that Coulter considers promising -- with the goal of progressing toward commercial development.


The technology, irreversible electroporation (IRE), was invented by Davalos and Boris Rubinsky, a bioengineering prof at the University of California, Berkeley.


Electroporation is a phenomenon that increases the permeability of a cell from none to a reversible opening to an irreversible opening. With the latter, the prison cell will die. For decades, biologists have used reversible electroporation in laboratories to introduce drugs and genes into cells while trying to avoid irreversible electroporation. By direct contrast, biomedical engineers Davalos and Rubinsky are now victimization irreversible electroporation to objective cancer cells in the body.


Irreversible electroporation would be a minimally invasive surgical focal-ablation technique that could absent the unsuitable tissue without the manipulation of heat such as radiation. The irreversible electroporation procedure involves placing little needles nigh the targeted region. The needles present a series of low-pitched energy microsecond electric pulses to the targeted tissue and the area treated can be monitored in real time using sonography. In science laboratory testing, irreversible electroporation ruined targeted tissue paper with sub-millimeter resolution, and it proved easy to control and to be precise.


Furthermore, "the procedure spares nerves and major blood vessels, enabling handling in otherwise inoperable areas," Davalos, the 2006 recipient role of the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Award for Most Promising Engineer, added.


Davalos and his colleagues published the first experiments on exploitation irreversible electroporation on tumors in the November 2007 issue of PLoS ONE. Their optimum parameters achieved complete regression in 92 percent of the treated tumors in vivo in preclinical mouse models. These results were achieved with a individual treatment that lasted less than basketball team minutes. Collaborator Lluis M. Mir, director of the Laboratory of Vectorology and Gene Transfer research of the Institut Gustave Rousssy, the prima cancer research center in Europe, and one of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), led the study.


In April 2008, Gary Onik, a radiologist with Florida Hospital and Rubinsky conducted a pilot study on five people on soft tissue in the prostate gland to prove the refuge of the procedure on humans.


Davalos' collaborators on the Coulter Foundation grant are: Mir; John Robertson, professor of biomedical science; and John Rossmeisl, an assistant professor of small animal clinical services, both of whom are in the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine; and Waldemar Debinski of Wake Forest.

Davalos' Virginia Tech collaborators on the grant from Wake Forest are Robertson and Nichole Rylander, assistant prof of mechanical engineering and also a member of the Virginia Tech-Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences. Wake Forest researcher Suzy Torti, of its cancer biology department, is also working with the group.

Davalos' Virginia Tech


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