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Nanomagnetic Actuation of Hybrid Stents for Hyperthermia Treatment of Hollow Organ Tumors

Benedikt Mues, Benedict Bauer, Anjali A. Roeth, Jeanette Ortega, Eva Miriam Buhl, Patricia Radon, Frank Wiekhorst, Thomas Gries, Thomas Schmitz‐Rode, Ioana Slabu

2021Nanomaterials25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper describes a magnetic nanotechnology that locally enables hyperthermia treatment of hollow organ tumors by using polymer hybrid stents with incorporated magnetic nanoparticles (MNP). The hybrid stents are implanted and activated in an alternating magnetic field to generate therapeutically effective heat, thereby destroying the tumor. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of nanomagnetic actuation of three prototype hybrid stents for hyperthermia treatment of hollow organ tumors. The results show that the heating efficiency of stent filaments increases with frequency from approximately 60 W/gFe (95 kHz) to approximately 250 W/gFe (270 kHz). The same trend is observed for the variation of magnetic field amplitude; however, heating efficiency saturates at approximately 30 kA/m. MNP immobilization strongly influences heating efficiency showing a relative difference in heating output of up to 60% compared to that of freely dispersed MNP. The stents showed uniformly distributed heat on their surface reaching therapeutically effective temperatures of 43 °C and were tested in an explanted pig bile duct for their biological safety. Nanomagnetic actuation of hybrid stents opens new possibilities in cancer treatment of hollow organ tumors.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceHyperthermiaStentMagnetic hyperthermiaMagnetic fieldNanoparticleBiomedical engineeringMagnetic nanoparticlesNanotechnologyRadiologyMedicinePhysicsInternal medicineQuantum mechanicsCharacterization and Applications of Magnetic NanoparticlesNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryMicro and Nano Robotics
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