41 research outputs found
Evaluation of Important Treatment Parameters in Supraphysiological Thermal Therapy of Human Liver Cancer HepG2 Cells
This study was aimed at simulating the effect of various treatment parameters like heating rate (HR), peak temperature (PT) and hold/total treatment time on the viability of human liver cancer HepG2 cells subjected to different thermal therapy conditions. The problem was approached by investigating the injury kinetics obtained using experimentally measured viability of the cells, heated to temperatures of 50–70°C for 0–9 min at HRs of 100, 200, 300 and 525°C min(−1). An empirical expression obtained between the activation energy (E) and HR was extended to obtain the E values over a broad range of HRs from 5 to 600°C min(−1) that mimic the actual conditions encountered in a typical thermal therapy protocol. Further, the effect of the HR (5–600°C min(−1)) and PT (50–85°C) on the cell survival was studied over a range of hold times. A significant drop in survival from 90% to 0% with the simultaneous increase in HR and PT was observed as the hold time increased from 0 to 5 min. For complete cell death, the hold time increased with the increase in the HR for a given PT, while the total time showed presence of minima for 60, 65 and 70°C at HRs of 50, 100 and 200°C min(−1), respectively
Health-Based Risk Adjustment: Improving the Pharmacy-Based Cost Group Model by Adding Diagnostic Cost Groups
Since 1991, risk-adjusted premium subsidies have existed in the Dutch social health insurance sector, which covered about two-thirds of the population until 2006. In 2002, pharmacy-based cost groups (PCGs) were included in the demographic risk adjustment model, which improved the goodness-of-fit, as measured by the R 2 , to 11.5%. The model's R 2 reached 22.8% in 2004, when inpatient diagnostic information was added in the form of diagnostic cost groups (DCGs). PCGs and DCGs appear to be complementary in their ability to predict future costs. PCGs particularly improve the R 2 for outpatient expenses, whereas DCGs improve the R 2 for inpatient expenses. In 2006, this system of risk-adjusted premium subsidies was extended to cover the entire population
Macrophages as Nanoparticle Delivery Vectors for Photothermal Therapy of Brain Tumors.
Certain types of stem and immune cells, which have an innate ability to target and infiltrate tumors, can be utilized as vectors to deliver several types of anticancer agents. In particular monocytes have the advantage of carrying relatively large payloads of therapeutic nanomaterials, can be patient derived in large numbers and are able to actively infiltrate tumors despite many barriers often present in the microenvironment. Monocytes can selectively cross the compromised blood–brain barrier surrounding brain tumors and are known to actively migrate to hypoxic tumor regions. Of particular interest is the observation that, following near-infrared exposure of tumors containing gold-nanoshell-loaded macrophages, sufficient hyperthermia can be generated to suppress tumor growth. Collectively, these findings demonstrate the potential of monocytes as nanoparticle delivery vectors for several types of site specific light-based cancer therapies