A new study has shown that electrical fields can slow, and in some cases halt, the spread of breast cancer cells through the body.
The research also found how electromagnetic fields (EMFs) have the ability to hinder the number of cancer cells that can spread. Pulsed EMFs have also been shown to have some effectiveness in pain management, and low level EMFs were shown also to reduce blood glucose in animal models, a possible first step to treating diabetes.
“We think we can hinder metastasis by applying these fields, but we also think it may be possible to even destroy tumours using this approach,” said senior author Vish Subramaniam, former professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at The Ohio State University. Subramaniam retired from Ohio State in December.
“That is unclear at this stage, but we are working on understanding that – how big should the electromagnetic field be, how close should it be to the tumour? Those are the next questions we hope to answer,” he said.
Subramaniam said that this had the effect of the EMF is to slow down some of the cancer cells. “It makes some of them stop for a little while before they start to move, slowly, again. As a group, they appear to have split up. So how quickly the whole group is moving and for how long they are moving becomes affected.”
The effect was applied to human cancer cells in vitro and has not been applied in humans.
The EMFs seem to selectively slow down the cancer cells’ metabolism by affecting the electrical fields inside the individual cells—completely noninvasively and without side effects like ionising radiation, which would mean a revolutionary form of cancer treatment if it could be made to work in practice. This ability to access a cell’s internal workings is new to the study of how cancer metastasises, said Prof Subramaniam.
“Now that we know this, we can start to answer other questions, too,” Subramaniam said. “How do we affect the metabolism to the point that we not only make it not move but we choke it, we completely starve it. Or can we slow it down to the point where it will always remain weak?”
Source: News-Medical.Net
Journal information: Jones, T.H., et al. (2021) Directional Migration of Breast Cancer Cells Hindered by Induced Electric Fields May Be Due to Accompanying Alteration of Metabolic Activity. Bioelectricity. doi.org/10.1089/bioe.2020.0048.