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Uniquely shaped, fast-heating nanoparticles halt ovarian tumor growth

Uniquely shaped, fast-heating nanoparticles halt ovarian tumor growth
New magnetic nanoparticles in the shape of a cube sandwiched between two pyramids represent a breakthrough for treating ovarian tumors and possibly other types of cancer. Credit: Parinaz Ghanbari.

New magnetic nanoparticles in the shape of a cube sandwiched between two pyramids represent a breakthrough for treating ovarian tumors and possibly other types of cancer, according to the Oregon State University researchers who developed them.

The scientists say the study underscores the importance of shape in magnetic nanoparticle design and that the findings will potentially revolutionize treatments that use heat to damage or kill cancer cells.

Made of iron oxide and doped with cobalt, the nanoparticles show exceptional heating efficiency when exposed to an alternating magnetic field. Doping refers to adding something as a means of tailoring characteristics.

When the particles accumulate in cancerous tissue after intravenous injection, they're able to quickly rise to temperatures that weaken or destroy .

The mouse model study, published in , is part of ongoing nanomedicine research by scientists in the OSU College of Pharmacy.

Nanoparticles are bits of matter as tiny as one-billionth of a meter that have special properties because of their small size and high ratio of surface area to volume.

Magnetic nanoparticles have shown anticancer potential for years, the scientists say, but at present, magnetic hyperthermia can typically only be used for patients whose tumors are accessible by a hypodermic needle—that is, if the particles can be injected right into the cancer.

"With currently available , the required therapeutic temperatures—above 44 degrees Celsius—can only be achieved by direct injection," said Oleh Taratula, professor of pharmaceutical sciences.

"And those nanoparticles have only moderate heating efficiency, which means you need a high concentration of them in the tumor—higher than systemic administration can usually achieve—to generate enough heat."

Taratula and collaborators at Oregon State, Oregon Health & Science University and the Indian Institute of Technology Mandi used a novel thermal decomposition method—a two-step process they call seed and growth—to make cobalt-doped iron oxide nanoparticles in a cubical bipyramid form. Their paper is the first report of that type of nanoparticle with that specific shape.

"These nanoparticles exhibit a remarkable ability to heat up fast, raising temperatures by 3.73 degrees Celsius per second under an alternating magnetic field," said Prem Singh, a postdoctoral researcher in the College of Pharmacy. "That's double the heating performance of our previously published cobalt-doped nanoparticles."

That means an ovarian cancer patient could receive an and have her tumor stop growing following one 30-minute, non-invasive magnetic field session. Short treatment sessions enhance patient comfort and compliance, the researchers note.

A cancer-targeting peptide helps the nanoparticles accumulate in the tumor, and because the particles' heating efficiency is so strong, the necessary concentration of nanoparticles can be achieved without a high dosage, limiting toxicity and side effects.

"This is the first time systemically injected nanoparticles have been shown to heat tumors beyond 50° C, significantly surpassing the therapeutic threshold of 44° C for effective treatment at a clinically relevant dose," said Olena Taratula, associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences at OSU.

"There is now a lot of potential for expanding the application of magnetic hyperthermia to a variety of hard-to-reach tumors, making the treatment more versatile and widely used."

More information: Prem Singh et al, Precision‐Engineered Cobalt‐Doped Iron Oxide Nanoparticles: From Octahedron Seeds to Cubical Bipyramids for Enhanced Magnetic Hyperthermia, Advanced Functional Materials (2025).

Journal information: Advanced Functional Materials

Citation: Uniquely shaped, fast-heating nanoparticles halt ovarian tumor growth (2025, March 20) retrieved 30 April 2025 from /news/2025-03-uniquely-fast-nanoparticles-halt-ovarian.html
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