Scientists are preparing to test a seek-and-destroy treatment called smart bombs to treat prostate cancer in humans.
Scientists are preparing to test a seek-and-destroy treatment called "smart bombs" to treat prostate cancer in humans.
The "smart bombs" are so sophisticated that scientists are confident say they can destroy a tumour without damaging the healthy tissue surrounding it.If the trials, which will be conducted next year, prove successful, patients could be treated with the revolutionary new nanotechnology in five years, reports The Daily Express.
A US team at BIND Biosciences, in Massachusetts, will conduct trials on 25 patients.
The technology would also spare cancer sufferers from the devastating side effects of the chemotherapy "blanket approach", which kills healthy cells, causes hair loss and can make patients feel extremely ill.
The new technology uses tiny nanoparticles that are 1,000 times finer than a human hair.
They promise to deliver molecules of cancer-killing drugs directly to the tumour, wrapped in a "special delivery parcel".
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To save the parcels from attack, they are dipped in a compound that makes them invisible to the body's immune system defender.
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The researchers believe that nanotechnology could also work on breast, lung and brain cancers.
Source-ANI
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