| Literature DB >> 33274226 |
Huda F Alshaibi1, Bashayr Al-Shehri2, Basmah Hassan2, Raghad Al-Zahrani2, Taghreed Assiss2.
Abstract
According to the World Health Organization, the prevalence of cancer has increased worldwide. Oncological hyperthermia is a group of methods that overheat the malignant tissues locally or systematically. Nevertheless, hyperthermia is not widely accepted, primarily because of the lack of selectivity for cancer cells and because the temperature-triggered higher blood flow increases the nutrient supply to the tumor, raising the risk of metastases. These problems with classical hyperthermia led to the development of modulated electrohyperthermia (mEHT). The biophysical differences of the cancer cells and their healthy hosts allow for selective energy absorption on the membrane rafts of the plasma membrane of the tumor cells, triggering immunogenic cell death. Currently, this method is used in only 34 countries. The effectiveness of conventional oncotherapies increases when it is applied in combination with mEHT. In silico, in vitro, and in vivo preclinical research studies have all shown the extraordinary ability of mEHT to kill malignant cells. Clinical applications have improved the quality of life and the survival of patients. For these reasons, many other research studies are presently in progress worldwide. Thus, the objective of this review is to highlight the capabilities and advantages of mEHT and provide new hopes for cancer patients worldwide.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33274226 PMCID: PMC7683119 DOI: 10.1155/2020/8814878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Principle of mEHT therapy. The principles of mEHT and radiotherapy are similar, targeting nano range-sized parts of the cells to induce destruction this figure was adapted from Szasz A [45].
Figure 2Oncothermia targeting the extracellular electrolytes. Oncothermia delivers its energy mainly into extracellular electrolytes, creating a temperature gradient through the cellular membrane [4]. The thermal gradient action due to nonhomogeneous heating is active, until the thermal equilibrium equalises the temperature; this figure was adapted from Gabriella et al. [4].
Figure 3Schematic representation of the stimulation of immunogenic cell death- (ICD-) treating cells with different ICD inducers, such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and mEHT, results in the induction of cancer cells, which leads them to undergo apoptosis. Subsequently, apoptotic cells express damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMP) hallmarks, including the translocation of calreticulin from the endoplasmic reticulum to the cell surface, the release of high-mobility group B1 (HMGB1) from the nucleus, the extracellular secretion of ATP, and the expression of various heat shock proteins on the cell surface. This DAMP signal leads to the activation and maturation of dendritic cells, followed by activating several antitumor immune responses. This figure was adapted from Zhou et al. [124].
Clinical trials that used mEHT in combination with other treatments.
| No. | Tumor site | Number of patients | Treatment used | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Relapsed high-grade gliomas | 15 | mEHT + alkylating chemotherapy | Tolerable and safe for patients with relapses even with a high escalation of the dose. | [ |
| 2 | Advanced gliomas | 12 | Chemotherapy + radiotherapy + mEHT | CR = 1, PR = 2, RR = 25%. Median duration of response = 10 m. Median survival = 9 m, 25% survival rate at 1 year. | [ |
| 3 | Relapsed malignant gliomas | 24 | mEHT | Median survival = 19.5 m, 55% survival rate at 1 year, 15% at 2 years. | [ |
| 4 | Advanced glioblastoma | 60 | mEHT + immunotherapy | No added toxicity by immunotherapy. Median progression-free survival (PFS) = 13 m. Median follow-up 17 m, median OS was not reached. Estimated OS at 30 m was 58%. | [ |
| 5 | Various brain-gliomas | 140 | Chemotherapy + radiotherapy + mEHT | OS = 20.4 m. mEHT was safe and well tolerated. | [ |
| 6 | High-grade gliomas | 179 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | Longstanding complete and partial remissions after recurrence in both groups. | [ |
| 7 | Glioblastoma & astrocytoma | 149 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy (BSC, palliative range) | 5 y-OS = 83% (AST) in mEHT vs. 5 y-OS = 25% by BSC. 5 y-OS = 3.5% in mEHT vs. 5 y-OS = 1.2% by BSC for GBM. Median OS = 14 m of mEHT for GBM and OS = 16.5 m for AST. | [ |
| 8 | Advanced hepatocell. carcinoma | 21 | Chemotherapy + mEHT | PR = 1, CR = 0, SD = 11. Combined therapy was effective, and no major complications were observed. | [ |
| 9 | Refractory hepatocell. carcinoma | 22 | mEHT + thermo-active agents (TAA) or mEHT without TAA | CR = 1, PR = 0. Median OS = 20.5 weeks. 50% showed evidence of increasing QoL and minimal toxicity. | [ |
| 10 | Small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) | 22 | Chemotherapy + mEHT | mEHT-enhanced destruction of the cancer cells. Improved the OS of patients, too. | [ |
| 11 | Advanced cervical cancer | 236 | Random. Phase III chemoradiation alone CHR and mEHT group (mEHT + CHR) [preliminary data] | Preliminary data for the first 100 participants. A positive trend in survival and local disease control by mEHT. No significant differences in acute adverse events or QoL between the groups. | [ |
| 12 | Advanced cervical cancer | 38 | Chemotherapy ± mEHT | The overall response (CR + PR + SD vs. PD) was significantly greater with mEHT. No complications or extra adverse effects by mEHT. | [ |
| 13 | Advanced cervical cancer | 72 | Radiotherapy + chemotherapy + mEHT | CR + PR = 73.5%, SD = 14.7%. The addition of mEHT increased the QoL and OS. | [ |
| 14 | Advanced cervical carcinoma | 20 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | mEHT increased the peritumor temperature and blood flow in human cervical tumors, promoting the radiotherapy + chemotherapy. | [ |
| 15 | Advanced cervical carcinoma | 108 | mEHT + chemoradiotherapy | The complete metabolic response (CMR) of disease outside the radiation field at 6 m posttreatment shows the abscopal effect, significantly associated with the addition of mEHT. | [ |
| 16 | Advanced cervical carcinoma | 206 | Random. Phase III chemoradiation alone [ | Compliance to mEHT treatment was high (97% completed ≥8 treatments) with no significant differences in CRT-related toxicity between treatment groups or between HIV-positive and HIV-negative participants. | [ |
| 17 | Advanced cervical carcinoma | 202 | mEHT + chemoradiotherapy | Six-month local disease-free survival (LDFS) = 38.6% for mEHT and LDFS = 19.8% without mEHT ( | [ |
| 18 | Stage III-IV NSCLC | 15 | Ascorbic acid (AA) infusion + mEHT | AA safely synergises with mEHT and was well tolerated with no major adverse effects. | [ |
| 19 | Advanced NSCLC | 97 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | Median OS = 9.4 m with mEHT OS = 5.6 m without mEHT; ( | [ |
| 20 | Advanced NSCLC | 311 (61 + 197 + 53) | Radiotherapy + chemotherapy + mEHT | Two centres PFY ( | [ |
| 21 | Advanced NSCLC | 44 | Chemotherapy + ketogenic diet + hyperbaric oxygen + mEHT | Mean OS = 42.9 m, PFS = 41 m. No problems were encountered due to fasting, hypoglycemia, ketogenic diet, mEHT, or hyperbaric oxygen therapy. | [ |
| 22 | Peritoneal carcinomatosis with malignant ascites | 260 | mEHT + traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) compared to intraperitoneal chemoinfusion [ | The objective response rate (OPR) = 77.7% in study group (mEHT + TCM) vs. OPR = 63.8% in the ICI group. The QoL = 49.2% vs. 32.3% in the active and control group. Adverse effect rate (AER) = 2.3% vs. 12.3%. | [ |
| 23 | Advanced rectal cancer | 76 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | Downstaging + tumor regression, ypT0, and ypN0 was better with mEHT than without. No statistical significance. | [ |
| 24 | Liver metastasis from colorectal cancer | 80 | Chemotherapy + mEHT | Median OS = 24.5 m, and expected (historical) OS = 11 m. | [ |
| 25 | Various types of sarcoma | 13 | Radiotherapy + chemotherapy + mEHT | Primary, recurrent, and metastatic sarcomas responded to mEHT. The masses regressed. | [ |
| 26 | Soft tissue sarcoma | 24 | Chemotherapy + mEHT | Pathological response rate (pRR) = 42% in neoadjuvant chemo-hyperthermia treatment median OS = 31 m. | [ |
| 27 | Advanced pancreas carcinoma | 25 | mEHT + chemotherapy + ketogenic diet + oxygen therapy | Mean follow-up = 25.4 m, median OS = 15.8 m, median PFS = 15.8 m. | [ |
| 28 | Advanced pancreas carcinoma | 26 | Chemotherapy + mEHT | SD = 9 (48%), PR = 4 (21%) PD = 6 (31%). | [ |
| 29 | Advanced pancreas | 106 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | After 3 m, PR = 22 (64.7%), SD = 10 (29.4%), PD = 2 (8.3%) with mEHT after 3 m of the therapy. In group without mEHT in the same time: PR = 3 (8.3%), SD = 10 (27.8%), PD = 23 (34.3%). The median OS = 18 m with mEHT and OS = 10.9 m without mEHT. | [ |
| 30 | Advanced pancreas carcinoma | 20 | Enzyme-therapy + immunolo-modulation + hormone therapy + mEHT | MedianOS > 10m. Most patients experienced partially excellent improvement of QoL. | [ |
| 31 | Advanced pancreas carcinoma | 133 (26 + 73 + 34) | Radiotherapy + chemotherapy + mEHT | Two centres PFY ( | [ |
| 32 | Ovarian cancer | 19 | mEHT with dose escalation | The mEHT treatment was feasible in patients with recurrent or progressive ovarian cancer without any complications. | [ |
| 33 | Metastatic cancers (colorectal, ovarian, breast) | 23 | mEHT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | OS and time to progression (TTP) were influenced by the number of chemotherapy cycles ( | [ |
| 34 | Different types of metastatic/recurrent cancers | 33 | mEHT + radiotherapy | CR = 2 (6.1%), very good PR = 5 (15.2%), PR = 13 (39.4%), SD = 9 (27.3%), PD = 4 (12.1%). Three patients (9.1%) developed autoimmune toxicities. All three patients had long-lasting abscopal responses outside the irradiated area. | [ |
| 35 | Advanced gastric cancer | 24 | mEHT + chemotherapy + ketogenic diet + oxygen therapy | CR = 22 (88%). Mean follow-up = 23.9 m, mean OS = 39.5 m, mean PFS = 36.5 m. | [ |