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Original Article

The effects of hyperthermia in bone marrow purging of breast cancer

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Pages 21-29 | Received 23 Mar 1994, Accepted 02 May 1995, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The number of autologous bone marrow transplants done for solid tumours, particularly breast cancer, has risen steadily over the last ten years. The role of bone marrow or peripheral blood progenitor cell purging in transplantation is incompletely understood. Theoretically, the reinfusion of untreated bone marrow containing tumour cells might result in relapse in some patients treated with highdose chemotherapy and hematopoietic support. Therefore, safe and effective purging techniques may increase longterm, disease-free survivorship. In this study, hyperthermia was evaluated for its ability to purge CAMA-1 breast cancer cells from normal human bone marrow. Between two and nine trials of a range of temperatures (42–45d`C) and durations of treatment (1–4 h) were performed. The effect of hyperthermia on normal bone marrow alone and in mixes with breast cancer cells was also evaluated. Hyperthermia (45d`C, 4h) produced >5 logs of CAMA-1 cell kill. Exposures of 45d`C for 2h and 44d`C for 4h resulted in approximately three logs of cell kill, corresponding to < 1 % survival of clonogenic cells. Normal bone marrow was considerably more vulnerable to heat treatments, however, with approximately 1 % of progenitors remaining clonogenic after exposure of 43d`C for 2 h and 44d`C for 1 h. Therefore, although hyperthermia is able to achieve adequate CAMA-1 breast cancer cell kill, it remains more toxic to normal bone marrow as a purging method. To make hyperthermia useful in purging systems, mechanisms to selectively alter thermal sensitivity must be pursued.

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