4.6 Article

First-in-human trial of nanoelectroablation therapy for basal cell carcinoma: proof of method

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 135-137

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/exd.12303

Keywords

ablation; apoptosis; basal cell carcinoma; nanoelectroablation; nanosecond pulsed electric field

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01CA125722, R44CA150484, R44CA123924, R44 CA123924, R44 CA150484, R01 CA125722] Funding Source: Medline

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This nanoelectroablation therapy effectively treats subdermal murine allograft tumors, autochthonous basal cell carcinoma (BCC) tumors in Ptch1+/-K14-Cre-ER p53fl/fl mice, and UV-induced melanomas in C57/BL6 HGF/SF mice. Here, we described the first human trial of this modality. We treated 10 BCCs on three subjects with 100-1000 electric pulses 100ns in duration, 30kV/cm in amplitude, applied at 2 pulses per second. Seven of the 10 treated lesions were completely free of basaloid cells when biopsied and two partially regressed. Two of the 7 exhibited seborrheic keratosis in the absence of basaloid cells. One of the 10 treated lesions recurred by week 10 and histologically had the appearance of a squamous cell carcinoma. No scars were visible at the healed sites of any of the successfully ablated lesions. One hundred pulses were sufficient for complete ablation of BCCs with a single, 1-min nanoelectroablation treatment.

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