| (Philadelphia,
PA) - For the first time, ultrasound is being used in animal models
- to treat cancer by disrupting tumor blood vessels. Researchers
at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
completed a study in mice in which they used ultrasound both to
see a tumor’s blood perfusion and then to treat it with a
continuous wave of low-level ultrasound. After three minutes of
treatment at an intensity similar to what is used in physiotherapy
ultrasound (about 2.5 watts), researchers observed that the tumors
had little or no blood supply.
“We used an ultrasound intensity higher than that used for
imaging, but much lower than the high intensities used to ablate
tissue. And we saw that this new use had a profound effect on shutting
down the blood flow to the tumor and reducing the growth of the
tumor in mice,” said Chandra Sehgal, PhD,
Director of Ultrasound Research in the Department of Radiology at
Penn and the study’s principal investigator.
“We wanted to study this use of ultrasound because we observed
that some of these newly formed vessels created by tumors are very
weak in nature, and if you turn on low-intensity ultrasound vibrations
you can disrupt the blood flow through these vessels,” explained
Andrew Wood, DVSc, PhD, a co-investigator of the
study and based in the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary
Medicine.
Sehgal adds, “This approach is in keeping with the latest
study of cancer treatment utilizing antiangiogenic and antivascular
therapies, in which we look for ways to stop the growth of the vessels
supplying blood and nutrition to the tumors, rather than develop
methods to kill the tumor cells themselves.”
For years, ultrasound has been used for clinical imaging and for
therapeutic action in physical therapy. But now, Sehgal explains,
“These results are extremely encouraging. They raise the possibility
that, in the future, treatments with ultrasound either alone or
with chemotherapeutic and antivascular agents could be used to treat
cancers.”
The results of this study were published in the October 2005 issue
of “Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology.” You can access
it on-line at: www.sciencedirect.com
(search for the UMB journal and then access Volume 31 - October
2005, article 15 “The Antivascular Action of Physiotherapy
Ultrasound on Murine Tumors”).
This study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health
(NIH).
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PENN Medicine is a $2.7 billion enterprise
dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical
research, and high-quality patient care. PENN Medicine consists
of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (founded in
1765 as the nation's first medical school) and the University of
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Penn’s School of Medicine is ranked #2 in the nation
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and 700 students, the School of Medicine is recognized worldwide
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the nation's first hospital; Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; a
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