Tag Archives: Cornell University

Cardiac Fibrillation update

An international team of scientists — from the Max-Planck-Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization (Göttingen, Germany), Cornell University (Ithaca, New York) the Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon (France), the University Medicine Göttingen (Germany), the Rochester Institute of Technology (USA), and the Institut Non-Linéaire de Nice (France) — has developed a new low-energy method for terminating life-threatening cardiac fibrillation of the heart. They have shown that their new technique called LEAP (Low-Energy Anti-fibrillation Pacing) reduces the energy required for defibrillation by more than 80% as compared to the current conventional method. Their discovery opens the path for the painless therapy of life threatening cardiac fibrillation. The scientists describe their results in the current issue of Nature.

In a healthy heart, electrical pulses that propagate across the heart muscle in an orderly fashion control the organ’s movements: at regular intervals the heart’s ventricles and atria contract and relax again. In the case of cardiac arrhythmia, however, this does not work reliably. Here, electrical pulses may propagate throughout the heart chaotically, disabling the regular heartbeat and thus preventing the body from being properly supplied with blood. The most common cardiac arrhythmia is atrial fibrillation, which affects more than 10 million people in Europe and US.

For patients suffering from chronic atrial fibrillation there is one reliable solution: a defibrillation. A strong electric pulse, which patients perceive as painful and which can damage the surrounding tissue forces the heart back into its regular beating. The international team of scientists led by Stefan Luther from the Max Planck Institute and Flavio Fenton from Cornell University has proposed a new method. Using a cardiac catheter the researchers create a sequence of five weak electrical signals in the heart. “Only a few seconds later, the heart beats regularly again,” says Luther describing the team’s newest results.

Heart disease

Heart disease

Even though LEAP and standard defibrillation seem to work similarly at first sight, they initiate completely different processes within the heart. “The classic defibrillator works by using a very strong electric field that excites all cells of the organ. In contrast, LEAP uses low-energy pulses to synchronize the tissue,” says Fenton. For a short moment they can no longer transmit any electrical signals; the chaotic activity is terminated. “Afterwards, the heart resumes its normal, regular beating. The situation can be compared to turning a malfunctioning computer off and on again,” says Robert Gilmour from Cornell University.

The new method terminates the turbulent electric activity within the heart step by step. “Our most important allies are natural heterogeneities within the heart such as blood vessels, fatty tissue or fibrotic tissue,” says Eberhard Bodenschatz from the Max Planck Institute. In experiments and computer simulations the researchers were able to show that these heterogeneities can act as the origins for synchronizing waves. “Quite weak electrical pulses suffice to stimulate the cells in these regions,” says Alain Pumir from Lyon. With every additional pulse more heterogeneities are activated thus gradually suppressing chaotic activity. “The heterogeneities act as small control sites that — once activated — can “reprogram” the entire organ,” adds Valentin Krinsky from Nice.


In principle, the results also apply for defibrillation of ventricular fibrillation, a life-threatening arrhythmia, which is terminated only by external and implantable defibrillators. For a large number of patients wearing implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICD) the new technique may eliminate pain, improve the success rate of treatment, prolong battery life and therefore reduce the need for surgical device exchanges.

“The development of LEAP is a groundbreaking result and an outstanding example of successful interdisciplinary collaboration between physicists and physician-scientists, with immediate impact on the development of novel therapies for life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias,” says Markus Zabel from the University Center Göttingen. The ideas leading to LEAP were first developed by asking elementary physical questions about the interaction between electric field and cardiac tissue; the results of earlier theoretical work in physics, in particular in the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), may be finding their way to clinics. Indeed, “we are working to get this to the patient as fast as possible,” adds Gerd Hasenfuss, the head of the Heart Center Göttingen.

Breast and Ovarian cancer progress

Significant progress is being made in the prevention and treatment of ovarian and breast cancer, according to findings discussed at a global oncology conference.

“The studies presented at this meeting show impressive progress in disease control and prevention of breast cancer,” said Dr. Andrew Seidman, professor of medicine at Cornell University.

“Also, two consistent studies demonstrated the benefit of adding bevacizumab (Avastin) to standard chemotherapy for ovarian cancer,” he added.

Avastin, produced by Swiss biotech giant Roche, blocks the development of blood vessels needed for tumor growth.

A clinical trial showed a 52 percent reduction in the risk of progression of recurrent ovarian cancer in women who took Avastin in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy.

The most striking finding at the 47th annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology was that Aromasin, which blocks the production of estrogen, reduced by 65 percent the risk of breast cancer in high risk post-menopausal women.

Close to three-quarters of breast cancer tumors need estrogen to grow.

Breast cancer cell

Breast cancer cell

Annually, there are 1.3 million new cases of breast cancer and nearly 500,000 women die worldwide. In the United States, only lung cancer accounts for more deaths in women.

Paul Goss of Harvard Medical School and lead author of the study on exemestane — sold under the brand name Aromasin — said it’s the “first major clinical trial” in the past 10 years on breast cancer prevention.

“Exemestane may be considered a new option for the prevention of breast cancer,” Goss said during a press conference.

The clinical study was conducted from 2004 to 2010 and enrolled 4,560 women from the United States, Canada, Spain and France who had at least one major risk factor such as being age 60 or older, or having prior breast cancer tumors, including breast cancer with mastectomy.

Half the participants received Aromasin, produced by US pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, and half were given a placebo.

After a period of three years, the Aromasin group had about one third as many invasive cancers as those in the placebo group — a result corresponding to what researchers expected at the beginning of the trial, Goss said.

Aromastate inhibitors like exemestane are distinct from other anti-estrogen therapies such as tamoxifen and raloxifene, which have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration as preventative therapies for women at high breast cancer risk.

Exemestane, too, has been approved by the FDA, for use in early breast cancer patients.


The most common side effects reported by Aromasin users include fatigue, hot flashes, insomnia and joint pain.

Also Saturday, researchers said extra radiation treatment lowers the rate of breast cancer recurring in women who have had tumors surgically removed.

More than 1,800 women participated, receiving whole breast radiation (WBI) alone or WBI along with radiation to the surrounding lymph nodes.

Five years later, women who received radiation treatment to the breast and lymph nodes had a 41 percent lower rate of recurrences near the tumor site and a 36 percent lower rate of cancer recurrences in other parts of the body.

“These results are potentially practice-changing,” said Timothy Whelan, an oncology professor at McMaster University of Canada and lead author of the clinical study.