Houston Methodist Academic Institute Viewbook

Page 44

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HOUSTON METHODIST ACADEMIC INSTITUTE

Can Devices Provide A

New Treatment Option for Glioblastoma? Experts at the Houston Methodist Kenneth R. Peak Brain & Pituitary Tumor Treatment Center are developing new glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) treatment options, including an innovative technology that provides anticancer therapy through a wearable device.

David S. Baskin, MD

Santosh Helekar, MD, PhD

GBM is the most common

On a cellular level, they demonstrated that when OMFs are

and aggressive form

applied in a defined pattern at a certain range of frequencies,

of brain cancer. After

they disrupt electron flows in the mitochondrial electron

40 years of research,

transport chain that drives cellular fuel production. This

median survival with

disruption leads to the generation of reactive oxygen species,

aggressive treatment

triggering a cascade of cellular events that leads to cancer

has only improved from 9 to 15 months and the quality

cell apoptosis. Compared with normal cells of the same tissue

of life during this time is often poor.

type, cancer cells have critically high levels of reactive oxygen species at baseline that are poised to trigger apoptosis if

A team of researchers has developed a new method of

further increased.

generating an oscillating magnetic field (OMF) that eradicates cancer cells via a wearable device. These studies were made

With this information, the investigators further optimized the

possible by the prior invention of a wearable miniaturized

stimulus parameters of OMF stimulation and confirmed safety

multifocal transcranial magnetic stimulator by Santosh

and efficacy in a humanized preclinical model of GBM. They

Helekar, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurosurgery, and

then modified the Helekar-Voss Transcranial Permanent

Henning Voss, associate professor of physics in radiology at

Magnet Stimulator device to construct a wearable prototype

Weill Cornell Medical College. The device uses microstimulators,

for humans called an Oncomagnetic device along with the

called oncoscillators, that rotate strong neodymium permanent

associated hardware, software and mobile applications.

magnets-devised patterns. Helekar and his colleagues have produced selective anticancer effects in patient-derived GBM and breast cancer cells in culture without damaging cultured normal cells.

We believe that our current investigations may help to establish Oncomagnetics as a GBM treatment that does not have the limitations of chemotherapeutic agents. Given that various cancerous cell types are susceptible to apoptosis by OMF-induced accentuation of reactive oxygen species, we hope to modulate our nascent OMF treatment to target other cancers.

– D avid S. Baskin, MD Kenneth R. Peak Presidential Distinguished Chair & Program Director, Neurosurgery Residency, Department of Neurosurgery Professor, Neurosurgery Houston Methodist


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Articles inside

Faculty and Research Development

0
page 51

Graduate Medical Education

4min
pages 52-56

Neural Control of Organ Degeneration and Regeneration (NeuralCODR) Training Program

1min
page 50

Houston Methodist Institute for Technology, Innovation & Education (MITIESM

1min
page 42

Houston Methodist Hospital’s New Paula and Joseph C. “Rusty” Walter III Tower Offers the Most Advanced Treatments and Innovations Available

1min
page 45

Can Devices Provide A New Treatment Option for Glioblastoma?

2min
page 44

Engineering Medicine (EnMed

1min
page 49

Novel Monoclonal Antibody Treatment Halts Tumor Growth in Deadly Ovarian and Pancreatic Cancers

2min
pages 40-41

Siemens Healthineers and Houston Methodist Imaging Innovation Hub Empowers Researchers to Push Boundaries

3min
pages 38-39

Dissolvable Implants Enhance the Body’s Ability to Heal Broken Bones

1min
pages 28-29

Expanding the RNAcore to Encompass the Entire Cycle of a Cure

3min
pages 36-37

Non-invasive Spinal Stimulation Enables Paralyzed People to Stand Unassisted

1min
pages 26-27

Devising a Novel Combination Treatment for Aggressive Double-hit Lymphoma

0
page 35

Houston Methodist and Rice University Launch Center for Translational Neural Prosthetics and Interfaces

4min
pages 24-25

The Ann Kimball and John W. Johnson Center for Cellular Therapeutics

1min
page 8

Paula and Joseph C. “Rusty” Walter III

2min
pages 12-13

Mobile App Improves Joint Replacement Surgery Outcomes

1min
page 23

Houston Methodist Researchers Step Up and Face the Challenges of COVID-19 Virus

4min
pages 18-19

The Fondren Food & Health Alliance and The Fondren Inflammation Collaboration

1min
page 9

Breast Cancer Survivors Find a Way to Maintain Healthy Lifestyles and Lose Weight on Their Phones

2min
page 22

COVID-19 Spotlights Social Determinants of Health

3min
pages 16-17

Jerold B. Katz Academy of Translational Research

2min
pages 14-15
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