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Heat-triggered 'grenades' hit cancer

Health Desk |
Update: 2015-10-30 22:42:00
Heat-triggered 'grenades' hit cancer

DHAKA: Scientists have designed microscopic "grenades" that can explode their cancer-killing payload in tumours.

The team will present its findings at the National Cancer Research Institute conference next week, bbc.com reported.

They plan to use liposomes - tiny bubbles of fat, which carry materials round the body - to release toxic drugs when their temperature is raised.

The "grenades" are intended to avoid side effects by ensuring the drugs target only the tumour.

Experts said such technology, which has been effective in animal experiments, was the "holy grail of nanomedicine".

Cancer scientists are trying to harness the transporting abilities of these fatty spheres by getting them to carry toxic drugs to tumours.

"The difficulty is, how do you release them when they reach their target?" Prof Kostas Kostarelos, from the University of Manchester, told the BBC News website.

The Nanomedicine Lab in Manchester has designed liposomes that are water-tight at normal body temperature. But when the temperature increases to 42C they become leaky.

"The challenge for us is to try to develop liposomes in such a way that they will be very stable at 37C and not leak any cancer drug molecules and then abruptly release them at 42C," Prof Kostarelos added.

BDST: 0842 HRS, OCT 31, 2015
RS

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