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  <title><![CDATA[Magnetic Nanoparticles Show Promise for Combating Human Cancer]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>Scientists at Georgia Tech and
the Ovarian Cancer Institute have further developed a potential new treatment
against cancer that uses magnetic nanoparticles to attach to cancer cells,
removing them from the body. The treatment, tested in mice in 2008, has now
been tested using samples from human cancer patients. The results appear online
in the journal <em>Nanomedicine</em>.</p>

<p>“We are primarily interested in developing an effective
method to reduce the spread of ovarian cancer cells to other organs ,” said
John McDonald, professor at the the School of Biology at the Georgia Institute
of Technology and chief research scientist at the Ovarian Cancer Institute.</p>

<p>&nbsp;The idea came to the research team from the work of Ken
Scarberry, then a Ph.D. student at Tech. Scarberry originally conceived of the
idea as a means of extracting viruses and virally infected cells. At his
advisor’s suggestion Scarberry began looking at how the system could work with
cancer cells.</p>

<p>&nbsp;He published his first paper on the subject in the <em>Journal
of the American Chemical Society</em> in July 2008. In that paper he and
McDonald showed that by giving the cancer cells of the mice a fluorescent green
tag and staining the magnetic nanoparticles red, they were able to apply a
magnet and move the green cancer cells to the abdominal region.</p>

<p>&nbsp;Now McDonald and Scarberry, currently a post-doc in McDonald’s
lab, has showed that the magnetic technique works with human cancer cells.</p>

<p>&nbsp;“Often, the lethality of cancers
is not attributed to the original tumor but to the establishment of distant
tumors by cancer cells that exfoliate from the primary tumor,” said Scarberry.
“Circulating tumor cells can implant at distant sites and give rise to
secondary tumors.&nbsp; Our technique is
designed to filter the peritoneal fluid or blood and remove these free floating
cancer cells, which should increase longevity by preventing the continued
metastatic spread of the cancer.”</p>

<p>&nbsp;In tests, they showed that their
technique worked as well with at capturing cancer cells from human patient
samples as it did previously in mice. The next step is to test how well the
technique can increase survivorship in live animal models. If that goes well,
they will then test it with humans.</p>]]></body>
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      <value>2010-02-01T00:00:00-05:00</value>
      <timezone><![CDATA[America/New_York]]></timezone>
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      <value><![CDATA[Scientists show how magnetic nanoparticles can fight cancer]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[Scientists at Georgia Tech and the Ovarian Cancer Institute have further developed a potential new treatment against cancer that uses magnetic nanoparticles to attach to cancer cells, removing them from the body. The treatment, tested in mice in 2008, has now been tested using samples from human cancer patients.]]></value>
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            <title><![CDATA[Magnetic Nanoparticles Attach to Human Cancer Cells]]></title>
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                  <image_alt><![CDATA[Magnetic Nanoparticles Attach to Human Cancer Cells]]></image_alt>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>David Terraso</p><p>Communications and Marketing</p><p>404-385-2966</p><p><a href="mailto:david.terraso@comm.gatech.edu">david.terraso@comm.gatech.edu</a></p>]]></value>
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         say? There are more problems than there's time to solve.  -->
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        <![CDATA[Cancer Research]]>
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