Exploiting Unique Alignment of Cobalt Ferrite Nanoparticles, Mild Hyperthermia, and Controlled Intrinsic Cobalt Toxicity for Cancer Therapy

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Abstract

Nanoparticle‐based magnetic hyperthermia is a well‐known thermal therapy platform studied to treat solid tumors, but its use for monotherapy is limited due to incomplete tumor eradication at hyperthermia temperature (45 °C). It is often combined with chemotherapy for obtaining a more effective therapeutic outcome. Cubic‐shaped cobalt ferrite nanoparticles (Co–Fe NCs) serve as magnetic hyperthermia agents and as a cytotoxic agent due to the known cobalt ion toxicity, allowing the achievement of both heat and cytotoxic effects from a single platform. In addition to this advantage, Co–Fe NCs have the unique ability to form growing chains under an alternating magnetic field (AMF). This unique chain formation, along with the mild hyperthermia and intrinsic cobalt toxicity, leads to complete tumor regression and improved overall survival in an in vivo murine xenograft model, all under clinically approved AMF conditions. Numerical calculations identify magnetic anisotropy as the main Co–Fe NCs’ feature to generate such chain formations. This novel combination therapy can improve the effects of magnetic hyperthermia, inaugurating investigation of mechanical behaviors of nanoparticles under AMF, as a new avenue for cancer therapy

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Balakrishnan, P. B., Silvestri, N., Fernandez‐Cabada, T., Marinaro, F., Fernandes, S., Fiorito, S., Miscuglio, M., Serantes, D., Ruta, S., Livesey, K., Hovorka, O., Chantrell, R., Pellegrino, T., Exploiting Unique Alignment of Cobalt Ferrite Nanoparticles, Mild Hyperthermia, and Controlled Intrinsic Cobalt Toxicity for Cancer Therapy. Adv. Mater. 2020, 32, 2003712. https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202003712

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This work was partially funded by the European Research Council (starting grant ICARO, Contract No. 678109) and partially by the AIRC project (Contract No. 14527). The authors also acknowledge Centro de Supercomputación de Galicia (CESGA) for the computational resources. D.S. acknowledges Xunta de Galicia for financial support under the I2C Plan and the Strategic Grouping in Materials (AeMAT; Grant No. ED431E2018/08). This work made use of computational facilities funded by the Small items of research equipment at the University of York ENERGY (Grant No. EP/K031589/1)

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© 2020 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH GmbH. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
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