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  2. Cancer Cell Permeability Induced by Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) as a Physical Approach to Improve Chemotherapy Uptake and Overcome Multidrug Resistance

Cancer Cell Permeability Induced by Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) as a Physical Approach to Improve Chemotherapy Uptake and Overcome Multidrug Resistance

  • Mol Cancer Ther. 2025 Jun 30. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-25-0019.
Bella Koltun 1 Tali Voloshin 2 Cfir David 1 Tal Kan 3 Yiftah Barsheshet 1 Alexandra Volodin 1 Shay Cahal 2 Catherine Tempel-Brami 4 Mai Shai 1 Sara Jacobovitch 3 David Roash-Lancry 1 Boris Brant 1 Noa Kaynan 2 Lilach Koren 1 Anat Klein-Goldberg 1 Efrat Zemer Tov 1 Rom Paz 1 Adi Haber 1 Moshe Giladi 4 Uri Weinberg 2 Yoram Palti 5
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Novocure Ltd, Israel.
  • 2 Novocure Ltd., Haifa, Israel.
  • 3 Novocure Ltd, Haifa, Israel.
  • 4 Novocure, Haifa, Israel.
  • 5 NovoCure Ltd., Haifa, Israel.
Abstract

Multidrug resistance (MDR) is a major challenge in Cancer treatment. One predominant MDR mechanism involves the overexpression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter proteins on the cell membrane, leading to increased chemotherapy efflux. Strategies to resolve MDR have not yet yielded substantial survival benefits. Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) represent an innovative therapeutic modality for Cancer treatment and have been shown to enhance membrane permeability in glioblastoma cells. The current study aimed to characterize this phenomenon and to evaluate its potential to increase chemotherapy accumulation, thus overcoming MDR. In vitro analyses using the exclusion dye 7-aminoactinomycin D (7-AAD) demonstrated that TTFields-induced enhancement of Cancer cell permeability is pan-cancer, reversible, specific to Cancer cells, and requires cell-cycle progression through the G2/M phase. Furthermore, TTFields significantly increased intracellular accumulation of doxorubicin (DOX), mitoxantrone (MTX), and cisplatin (CIS) in resistant cells, restoring uptake to levels observed in sensitive cells, without altering MDR transporter expression. Increased chemotherapy accumulation was confirmed in vivo, as demonstrated by elevated DOX accumulation in breast tumors and paclitaxel (PTX) accumulation in lung tumors. Importantly, TTFields sensitized both DOX-sensitive and DOX-resistant cells to DOX-induced cytotoxicity in vitro. In mouse models bearing breast tumors, co-administration of sub-therapeutic or therapeutic DOX doses with TTFields significantly reduced tumor growth compared to either treatment alone. In conclusion, the findings suggest that adding TTFields to chemotherapy regimens may enhance drug delivery and efficacy in tumors exhibiting MDR. Further clinical studies evaluating TTFields concomitant with chemotherapy in MDR Cancer patients are warranted.

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