WASHINGTON DC,
US: Cancerous brain tumors are notorious for growing back despite
surgical attempts to remove them - and for leading to a dire prognosis
for patients. But scientists are developing a new way to try to root out
malignant cells during surgery so fewer or none get left behind to form
new tumors. The method, reported in the journal ACS Nano, could someday
vastly improve the outlook for patients.
Researcher
Moritz F Kircher and colleagues at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer
Center point out that malignant brain tumors, particularly the kind
known as glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), are among the toughest to beat.
Although relatively rare, GBM is highly aggressive, and its cells
multiply rapidly. Surgical removal is one of the main weapons doctors
have to treat brain tumors.
The problem is that currently, there’s no
way to know if they have taken out all of the cancerous cells. And
removing extra material “just in case” isn’t a good option in the brain,
which controls so many critical processes. The techniques surgeons have
at their disposal today are not accurate enough to identify all the
cells that need to be excised. So Kircher’s team decided to develop a
new method to fill that gap.
The researchers
used a handheld device resembling a laser pointer that can detect
“Raman nanoprobes” with very high accuracy. These nanoprobes are
injected the day prior to the operation and go specifically to tumor
cells, and not to normal brain cells. Using a handheld Raman scanner in a
mouse model that mimics human GBM, the researchers successfully
identified and removed all malignant cells in the rodents’ brains. Also,
because the technique involves steps that have already made it to human
testing for other purposes, the researchers conclude that it has the
potential to move readily into clinical trials. Surgeons might be able
to use the device in the future to treat other types of brain cancer,
they say.
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