Heat therapy is a promising therapeutic modality for cancer treatment due to the minimum adverse effects of selective local hyperthermia; however, the low heating efficiency of heat therapy under safe… Click to show full abstract
Heat therapy is a promising therapeutic modality for cancer treatment due to the minimum adverse effects of selective local hyperthermia; however, the low heating efficiency of heat therapy under safe conditions is an issue for its bioapplication. Here, we report the synthesis of water-dispersible sulfur doped iron oxides (SDIOs) with different phase structures and the exploration of the relationships between the different SDIOs and their induction heating capacities as a guideline to obtain a photo-magnetic hyperthermia agent. The agent exhibits good biocompatibility, excellent photothermal conversion efficiency (55.8%) and great T2 weighted magnetic resonance imaging (63.7 mM-1 s-1). Significantly, the SDIOs effectively eliminate tumours in a biologically safe AC magnetic field range (H·f = 4.3 < 5.0 × 106 kA m-1 s-1) and with 808 nm laser irradiation at a safe density of 0.33 W cm-2; also, they can be mostly metabolized from the body after one month. The work presented here adopts anion-doped iron oxides to dramatically improve photo-magnetic hyperthermia effects and may enable further exploration in thermotherapeutic research.
               
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