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Medicine Science

A Magnetic Helmet Shrunk a Deadly Tumor In World-First Test (engadget.com) 157

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Engadget: As part of the latest neurological breakthrough, researchers used a helmet that generates a magnetic field to shrink a deadly tumor by a third. The 53-year-old patient who underwent the treatment ultimately passed away due to an unrelated injury. But, an autopsy of his brain showed that the procedure had removed 31 percent of the tumor mass in a short time. The test marked the first noninvasive therapy for a deadly form of brain cancer known as glioblastoma.

The helmet features three rotating magnets connected to a microprocessor-based electronic controller operated by a rechargeable battery. As part of the therapy, the patient wore the device for five weeks at a clinic and then at home with the help of his wife. The resulting magnetic field therapy created by the helmet was administered for two hours initially and then ramped up to a maximum of six hours per day. During the period, the patient's tumor mass and volume shrunk by nearly a third, with shrinkage appearing to correlate with the treatment dose. The inventors of the device -- which received FDA approval for compassionate use treatment -- claim it could one day help treat brain cancer without radiation or chemotherapy.
"Our results... open a new world of non-invasive and nontoxic therapy...with many exciting possibilities for the future," said David S. Baskin, corresponding author and director of the Kenneth R. Peak Center for Brain and Pituitary Tumor Treatment in the Department of Neurosurgery at Houston Methodist Neurological Institute. Details of the procedure have been published in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers in Oncology.
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A Magnetic Helmet Shrunk a Deadly Tumor In World-First Test

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  • Thank god (Score:5, Funny)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:05AM (#61650257)

    For the covid vaccine making people magnetic. https://globalnews.ca/news/793... [globalnews.ca]

  • anecdote != data (Score:5, Insightful)

    by algaeman ( 600564 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:08AM (#61650269)
    Do it 1000 more times and it will be science. As it is, it is a feel-good story for 11 o'clock news.
    • Good signal though (Score:5, Informative)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:25AM (#61650329)

      Not concrete evidence by any stretch of the imagination, but the researchers have a compelling case for more study. They didn't have a control, but the tumor shrunk constantly when the magnets were employed. They stopped just the magnetic treatment for a couple of weeks, the tumor started growing again. When the magnets were used again, the tumor began shrinking once more.

      These type of blastomas are almost always fatal, and, as this is a noninvasive treatment, it's absolutely worth trying out.

      • Not concrete evidence by any stretch of the imagination, but the researchers have a compelling case for more study. They didn't have a control, but the tumor shrunk constantly when the magnets were employed. They stopped just the magnetic treatment for a couple of weeks, the tumor started growing again. When the magnets were used again, the tumor began shrinking once more.

        Agreed. It's fucking fascinating. It also defies all logic. More study required.

        These type of blastomas are almost always fatal, and, as this is a noninvasive treatment, it's absolutely worth trying out.

        They are. And it's a particularly nasty way to watch someone go. I had the displeasure of going through it 4 years back with a family member.

        The claim of non-toxicity makes me suspicious.
        Obviously the treatment is toxic... to the tumor.
        It is therefor quite bold to state that it's not toxic to the tissue that isn't a tumor. as that simply, generally, just isn't how cancer works.
        Again, more study required.

    • by luis_a_espinal ( 1810296 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:34AM (#61650361)

      Do it 1000 more times and it will be science. As it is, it is a feel-good story for 11 o'clock news.

      The first time in those 1000 times is also science. Let's not confuse being pedantic with being quirky or scientific.

      • Re:anecdote != data (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:59AM (#61650477) Homepage

        Once is anecdote.

        It's the first step toward science, but a sample of one is meaningless. Nobody should get excited about this, and it should not be in the news (not even a gosh-wow site like engadget), because it's not.

        • by werepants ( 1912634 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @12:00PM (#61650941)

          Sample size isn't what makes it science. Falsifiability is what makes it science. The researchers had a hypothesis (strong enough magnetic fields will disrupt cell division in cancerous brain tumors). They came up with an experiment that would falsify their prediction (use a strong magnetic field - is tumor growth disrupted?). So, their hypothesis, after an initial very credible attempt to falsify, has survived. They may be on to something.

          Every new idea starts somewhere. Sometimes it's possible to have a sample size of 1, or a sample size of 5, or a sample size of 100 trillion. In any of these situations, experimentalists can make meaningful contributions to science. General relativity had no experimental validation for years - it wasn't until 1919, with a single astronomical measurement that was consistent with the gravitational lensing Einstein predicted, that scientists had any confirmation of the theory. The important thing is that it did make a specific prediction, though, and it turns out that experimental results agreed with that prediction.

          • Sample size isn't what makes it science. Falsifiability is what makes it science.

            That sounds good, but no, that's only one tiny part of science. Really, reproducability is the hallmark of science.

            This was an uncontrolled experiment, and with a single data point. This is the start of science-- you have to start somewhere-- but in and of itself, it tells you almost nothing.

            Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Repeatable and reproducible with enough statistics to prove it... that's science.

            • Perhaps it should not be in the news but it's not meaningless. I don't know the stats for this cancer but if, say, the chances of the tumour spontaneously contracting like this are 1:10,000 then the results of this single data point are certainly of interest. If the odds are, say, 1:20, then much less so.

              Single patient case studies like this are relatively common in medicine. A lot of experimental medical procedure are very expensive, high cost, high risk, etc, so it's not unusual for papers to be writt

            • reproducability is the hallmark of science.

              By your rationale, Einstein's GR wasn't science until gravitational lensing had been observed multiple times. LIGO wasn't science from 2002 to 2010 as it detected no gravitational waves (sample size = 0) with limited equipment, and still wasn't science when it detected a single wave in 2016 (sample size =1) with upgraded equipment.

              On the other hand, there's a massive number of pseudoscience nutjobs on youtube who can reproduce their flawed perpetual motion machine or reactionless drive experiments all day l

            • Sample size isn't what makes it science. Falsifiability is what makes it science.

              That sounds good, but no, that's only one tiny part of science. Really, reproducability is the hallmark of science.

              This was an uncontrolled experiment, and with a single data point. This is the start of science-- you have to start somewhere-- but in and of itself, it tells you almost nothing.

              Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Repeatable and reproducible with enough statistics to prove it... that's science.

              The individual test is reproducible, by your definition, it is science. As you said, sample size doesn't matter, even if the size of the existing sample is 1 (the very first reproducible experiment.)

              You keep digging that hole of you proving that the very first test in this experiment is/was science by declaring that it needed to be reproducible (it is) and that the sample size doesn't matter (meaning the experiment sample size of 1 is irrelevant.)

              But you won't acknowledge that. Either you will drop sile

              • As you said, sample size doesn't matter, even if the size of the existing sample is 1 (the very first reproducible experiment.)

                At no point did I ever say "sample size doesn't matter". That was a quote from the comment I was responding to.

                A sample size of 1 is not science. It is a start, but only a start.

          • Sample size isn't what makes it science. Falsifiability is what makes it science. The researchers had a hypothesis (strong enough magnetic fields will disrupt cell division in cancerous brain tumors). They came up with an experiment that would falsify their prediction (use a strong magnetic field - is tumor growth disrupted?). So, their hypothesis, after an initial very credible attempt to falsify, has survived. They may be on to something.

            Exactly. It's these slashdot edge lords who confuse their own shallow skepticism with intelligence (or personality.)

            Their entire shit-post personality compels them to be "that guy", the contrarian who opposes not because he's onto something but because he/she has a need to be a contrarian, making up shit along the way.

            Normal people: "The sum of two odd numbers is an even number, let's start with 1+1. "

            Skeptic edge lord: "Hey, that 1+1 thing, that's just an anecdote, bro, do you even math, bro? Don't yo

          • Sample size isn't what makes it science. Falsifiability is what makes it science.

            100% correct.

            Fortunately for us this is a very cheap and non-invasive treatment and there are plenty of subjects to try it on. Even better: The results show up almost immediately (this guy was only doing it for a month) so the next 999 tests can be done very quickly.

            Let's see what happens.

        • It's the first step toward science, but a sample of one is meaningless.

          Not when it's repeatable it's not. And the test was repeated, they confirmed that the tumor behaved as expected when test was abandoned and resumed shrinking when the test was resumed.

          You contradict yourself. If something forms the first step then it by definition can't be meaningless.

        • Once is anecdote.

          It's the first step toward science, but a sample of one is meaningless. Nobody should get excited about this, and it should not be in the news (not even a gosh-wow site like engadget), because it's not.

          It is an anecdote only when it is done in isolation without a means to be repeated. When it is done with the purpose to explore a hypothesis and to create a repeatable test framework to test it, it is science.

          Do we need Barnie with a bunch of crayons to explain Science 101? Again, quirky pedantry is not a substitute for intellectualism.

    • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @10:12AM (#61650525) Journal

      Do it 1000 more times and it will be science. As it is, it is a feel-good story for 11 o'clock news.

      ...and make 1000 other people wear a helmet without magnets. Then compare the results.

    • Do it 1000 more times and it will be science.

      No, do it 1,000 times and we would now have a cure for a disease that nobody has a clue how it works. This is great medicine but appalling science because you have no understanding of what is going on. Even if a correlation is established, correlation is not causation: it may be nothing to do with the magnetic field perhaps it is just the placebo effect, or wearing a helmet or carrying weights on your head etc.

      • According to the patent filing (if this is the same version of the device), it disrupts mitochondrial process and destroys them. They tracked this ex-vivo using dyes to confirm the results.
        https://patentscope.wipo.int/s... [wipo.int]

        • Your link does not work and a patent filing is not peer-reviewed research: you can make literally any claim you like in one. If it disrupts the mitochondrial process then why does it not affect healthy cells and destroy them too?
          • My link works. You either have a way out of date browser that doesn't support the .int TLD or you have something broken. Fix your stuff before blaming the link.

            You ignored the peer-reviewed journal and wanted "science" on how it works. The patent describes the science they did - you can believe or not believe whether they did the science.

            If it disrupts the mitochondrial process then why does it not affect healthy cells and destroy them too?

            I expect that's why the rotation and orientation of the magnet is computer controlled - some precision targeting would be possible through modulating the speed and direc

            • Fix your stuff before blaming the link.

              My stuff works fine. The link works now but it was clearly a problem at their end since it was giving a "server error, file not found" type error.

              You ignored the peer-reviewed journal

              Ah, you mean the journal included on Beall's List of predatory publishers [scholarlyoa.com]? Check the entry out for Frontiers. The paper leaves huge questions hanging in the air such as the fact that that they claim their oscillating magnetic field was what worked. However, it generated a maximum of a 1mT field while they were subjecting the patient to a 7T magnetic field for th

              • Field strength does not give the whole picture. Even the Earth's magnetic field, which is a further fraction of the size, has effects on cellular growth and replication. And that has been proven in numerous journals and probably the inspiration for this type of treatment.

                Oscillation is entirely the point, not field strength. Oscillation is the difference between ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, for one - not amplitude. It may not work, but dismissing it on those grounds of silly.

                A predatory journal

                • Oscillation is the difference between ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, for one

                  Not really. All EM radiation is an EM wave and hence oscillates. What matters is the frequency of that radiation which determines whether the photons it consists of having enough energy to free electrons from their bound orbitals in an atom or molecule. The frequency to do this is well above the terahertz range and there is no way that a system of mechanically spinning magnets is going to reach anything even close to that sort of frequency.

                  It may not work, but dismissing it on those grounds of silly.

                  I'm not saying whether or not it works I am merely saying that pre

          • by cstacy ( 534252 )

            Your link does not work and a patent filing is not peer-reviewed research: you can make literally any claim you like in one. If it disrupts the mitochondrial process then why does it not affect healthy cells and destroy them too?

            Of course it affects healthy cells too. You don't seem to understand how cancer treatments work. Where did you go to medical school?

            • Of course it affects healthy cells too.

              That's not at all what they say: "...we have produced strong selective anticancer effects in patient derived GBM and xenografted mouse models without causing adverse effects on cultured normal cells and normal mice...".

              Where did you go to medical school?

              I did not - I'm a scientist, not a medic which is why it's annoying to see this sort of thing passed off as science when it is not, or at the very least it is not good science. I mean they publish in what Beall's list refers to as a predatory journal and are claiming that their 1mT rotating

          • > If it disrupts the mitochondrial process then why does it not affect healthy cells and destroy them too?

            I think the idea is that healthy cells in the adult brain don‘t divide much. So it would affect all cells that divide, While your regular neurons usually don’t divide at any point in time, and thus would not be affected much, Glioblastoma is one of the fastest growing cancers known.
            It‘s a very nice idea and it should be easy to prove because Glioblastoma has a very bad prognosis.

            • I think the idea is that healthy cells in the adult brain don‘t divide much.

              They don't, but they do divide. And in a clinically significant amount.

              So it would affect all cells that divide, While your regular neurons usually don’t divide at any point in time, and thus would not be affected much, Glioblastoma is one of the fastest growing cancers known. It‘s a very nice idea and it should be easy to prove because Glioblastoma has a very bad prognosis.

              This part I agree entirely with.
              A small amount of potential (probably temporary) brain damage in exchange for improving your 95% chance of dying due to that glioblastoma?
              Sign me up. It can't be any worse than chemotherapy, and unlike chemotherapy, this stuff (if it's real) would actually work past the blood-brain barrier.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        No, do it 1,000 times and we would now have a cure for a disease that nobody has a clue how it works. This is great medicine but appalling science because you have no understanding of what is going on.

        You keep saying that, but ignore the fact that there is a detailed theory of what is going on. Moreover, that theory has been tested in the lab (in vitro).

        The question is: Does it work with these helmets? Answer: Looks like it does, let's do some more tests to be sure.

        You know what is "appalling science"? Ignoring the literature.

  • First world test...

  • How does it work ? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:30AM (#61650353) Homepage

    The paper does not suggest any mechanism as to how a magnetic field will affect a tumour. As much as I would love this to be real ... let wait until many more tumours are cured.

    • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:43AM (#61650403) Homepage

      The paper does not suggest any mechanism as to how a magnetic field will affect a tumour.

      That's because there isn't one.

      • At one time we didn’t know the mechanism behind electricity. With your attitude we still wouldn’t. With more data their claims can be proven or disproven. Until then immediately dismissing research is a short sighted approach.

        • If the mechanisms they're proposing are true true then anybody who works around power lines or near large electric motors would be dead within a couple of years.

    • Magnets, how do they work?

    • The paper does not suggest any mechanism as to how a magnetic field will affect a tumour. As much as I would love this to be real ... let wait until many more tumours are cured.

      Tumors typically don't have good circulation/blood vessels, it's one of the ways that they escape the body's defense mechanisms. For this reason, they have difficulty dealing with increased temperature - there's no way to dump any excess heat.

      Some experimental tumor treatments try to leverage this effect, by warming the area using various means such as EM fields - basically lightly microwaving the area, with the usual cautions (several emitters around the body targeting a limited area, limited power, and so

    • I don't have any links to that, but I know of experiments of growing plants in electrostatic fields. What sometimes happen is that an ancient phenotype of the plant (think: millions of years ago) emerges, but the DNA code stays the same.

      Apparently sustained fields have more effect on living tissue than previously believed. I'm imagining that specific chemical reactions are influenced, pathways are changed etc.. It doesn't matter much when the field is transient and sporadic, but if it's constant, always the

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @11:24AM (#61650799)
      Radiation oncologist here. Before completely dismissing this, consider NovoTTF (now called Optune), an existing FDA-approved TTF (tumor treatment field) device, that operates using alternating current. It is described as an "electric taxane", because the fields disrupt assembly of the microtubule apparatus needed for mitosis. It, too, was initially dismissed as voodoo, until a randomized phase trial showed improved overall and progression free survival when added to standard therapy (PMID: 26670971)... back in 2015. Besides the initial voodoo factor, the mental image of walking around with electrodes taped to your head and a large battery backpack unfortunately turned a lot of people off the idea.
      • > Besides the initial voodoo factor, the mental image of walking around with electrodes taped to your head and a large battery backpack unfortunately turned a lot of people off the idea.

        That‘s really unfortunate:

        > The interim analysis included 210 patients randomized to TTFields plus
        temozolomide and 105 randomized to temozolomide alone, and was conducted at a median follow-up of 38 months (range, 18-60 months). Median progression-free survival in the intent-to-treat population was 7.1 months (95

      • by labnet ( 457441 )

        Don’t forget the work of Royal Rife who invented an RF system that used a modulated MHz RF near field to find the resonance frequency of cancer cells and mechanically destroy them. His lab was and equipment were mysteriously burnt down.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      I does. They hypothesize that it interferes with electron transport in mitochondria.

  • I'm sure there have been animal tests that lead up to trying this but the term "appearing to correlate" with only one patient isn't exactly a confidence booster.

    Going back to the 1960s there have been studies trying to understand what magnetic fields can do to help heal the body - this includes healing bones and regrowing lost limbs and organs.

    I'm not calling this snake oil, but let's see some positive results in multiple patients before this gets hyped in the media.

    • I meant for the subject to be: "Call me when the sample space is greater than 1" but the Right Chevron (Greater than) character was deleted.

      I'm sure there have been animal tests that lead up to trying this but the term "appearing to correlate" with only one patient isn't exactly a confidence booster.

      Going back to the 1960s there have been studies trying to understand what magnetic fields can do to help heal the body - this includes healing bones and regrowing lost limbs and organs.

      I'm not calling this snake oil, but let's see some positive results in multiple patients before this gets hyped in the media.

  • by godrik ( 1287354 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @09:57AM (#61650465)

    ... that my tin foil hat protects me from aliens!

  • They can replicate this on a larger study group with controls, I would be hard pressed to walk around like Rick Moranisâ(TM) character in Ghost Busters.

    For all we know, they received treatment outside the magnetic helmet or were the recipient of a miracle from their god. The fact they died a month in from an accident makes me think they tried walking around with this thing and were attracted to front grill of a moving truck. Sounds fishy.

    If it proves outâ¦wonderful. For now, I call bullsh

    • If you were BEHAVING like Rick Moranis of Ghost Busters did, you'd be willing try out any goofy new thing to cure whatever is messing with your brain just short of turning into a demonic dog.

      Just think if smoking causing cancer was new today... we'd have it be political and people would be instead freaking over invisible gasses in their basements (radon #2 cause) and a clever PR campaign would get nutty movements associated with the actual facts and their junk science would be promoted by the Trump cult...

  • More Detail (Score:5, Informative)

    by maz2331 ( 1104901 ) on Tuesday August 03, 2021 @11:12AM (#61650743)

    The article is light on details, but the peer-reviewed article gives this information:

    A new FDA-approved treatment involving electric fields alternating at 200 kHz called Optune therapy is now available for recurrent GBM as monotherapy and in combination with temozolomide for newly diagnosed GBM (3, 4). It is also being tested in clinical trials for other cancers. Its hypothesized mechanism of action involves disruption of tubulin dimers, mitotic spindles, and cell division by electric field-induced dipole alignment and dielectrophoresis (5). It has a modest effect on survival, increasing median overall survival by 0.6 month in recurrent GBM (3), and in newly diagnosed GBM by 31% (4). Even this modest effect is encouraging for patients.

    It has been shown that electromagnetic fields (EMF) produce anticancer effects in vitro (6, 7). We have conducted preclinical experiments with a new noninvasive wearable device known as an Oncomagnetic device that generates oscillating magnetic fields (OMF) by rotating strong permanent magnets (8, 9). The OMF generating components (oncoscillators) of the device can be attached to a helmet and treatment with the device does not require shaving the head. Using the oncoscillators of the device and specially devised patterns of magnet rotations we have produced strong selective anticancer effects in patient derived GBM and xenografted mouse models without causing adverse effects on cultured normal cells and normal mice (10–12). The mechanism of action of OMF differs from Optune and involves disruption of the electron transport in the mitochondrial respiratory chain causing elevation of reactive oxygen species and caspase-dependent cancer cell death (10–12).

    • Thanks for being the guy who didn't waste space here arguing about high school statistics!

      The stated mechanism of action seems awfully specific for the stage they're at though.
       

  • His head got stuck to the refrigerator?
  • Boy there's a lot of hyperbole and dunning-kruger going on here. Is this quackery? Maybe. It's a case report, not a double-blind randomized clinical trial. I wouldn't discount a case report, nor would I blindly accept its reported findings as gospel truth. It's intriguing.

    As for mechanism, we use lots of drugs for which mechanism of efficacy is only somewhat understood. If we fully understood mechanisms, than checkpoint inhibitors would work perfectly well in all use cases, but they don't. Strength of the
  • Suckers if you fall for this one off.

  • Patient dead.

  • A friend of mine was diagnosed with an aggressive glioblastoma and they did chemo and this magnet thing. We kind of laughed about it, this mesh helmet he wore attached to a power supply for 8 hours a day. We even did some testing with an O-scope and antenna to try and figure out the frequencies they were feeding to the cap (we measured 200kHz). Glioblastomas are crazy - one killed my cousin in 6 months from first diagnosis. This guy is still alive 2 years later and in some kind of remission.

  • ... his "unrelated injury" ?
    his head exploded when he walked near a microwave.

  • I found the story fascinating. It's amazing that they can treat cancer with magnets! It sound like quackery but the paper's been peer-reviewed & published in a high-impact journal.

    And, well, I've just looked up glioblastoma. It's nasty. Really, really nasty. I feel so sorry for the poor guy that had it. I really, really hope this works out to be an effective treatment for the disease.

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