A novel strategy combining magnetic particle hyperthermia pulses with enhanced performance binary ferrite carriers for effective in vitro manipulation of primary human osteogenic sarcoma cells

Int J Hyperthermia. 2016 Nov;32(7):778-85. doi: 10.1080/02656736.2016.1216183. Epub 2016 Aug 9.

Abstract

The present study examines the heating efficiency of a combination of manganese or cobalt ferrites in a binary (Co- or Mn-) ferrite nanoparticle form with magnetite, covered with citric acid to improve biocompatibility. The nanoparticle synthesis is based on the aqueous co-precipitation of proper salts, a facile, low-cost, environmentally friendly and high yield synthetic approach. By detailed structural and magnetic characterisation, the direct influence of structural and magnetic features on magnetic hyperthermia concludes to optimum heating efficiency. At a second stage, best performing magnetic nanoparticles undergo in vitro testing in three cell lines: one cancer cell line and two reference healthy cell lines. Both binary ferrite (MnFe2O4/Fe3O4 and CoFe2O4/Fe3O4) appear to be internalised and well tolerated by the cells while a versatile hyperthermia protocol is attempted in an effort to further improve their in vitro performance. Within this protocol, hyperthermia sequences are split in two runs with an intermediate 48 h time interval cell incubation stage while in each run a variable field mode (single or multiple pulses) is applied. Single-pulse field mode represents a typical hyperthermia application scheme where cells undergo the thermal shock continuously. On the other hand multiple-pulses mode refers to multiple, much shorter in duration AC field changes (field ON/OFFs), at each hyperthermia run, resulting eventually in high heating rate and much more harmful cell treatment. Consequently, we propose a novel series of improved performance heat mediators based on ferrite structures which show maximum efficiency at cancer cells when combined with a versatile multiple-pulse hyperthermia module.

Keywords: Magnetic particle hyperthermia; magnetic nanoparticles; multiple-pulses AMF; thermal dose.

MeSH terms

  • Ferric Compounds / chemistry*
  • Humans
  • Hyperthermia, Induced / methods
  • Magnetite Nanoparticles / chemistry*
  • Osteosarcoma / chemistry*
  • Temperature

Substances

  • Ferric Compounds
  • Magnetite Nanoparticles
  • ferrite