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Home » Ultrasound can target oral cancer cells: Study

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Ultrasound can target oral cancer cells: Study

Times Desk
Last updated: July 2, 2026 2:57 pm
Times Desk
Published: July 2, 2026
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Contents
  • Novelty of study
  • Consistency of response
  • Targeted treatment
The team found that the ultrasound drastically reduces the cancer cells’ ability to migrate and invade surrounding tissue.

The team found that the ultrasound drastically reduces the cancer cells’ ability to migrate and invade surrounding tissue.

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), in collaboration with clinicians at MS Ramaiah Medical College and Hospitals have found that oral cancer cells are vulnerable to the moderate mechanical stimulations produced by ultrasound.

The team of researchers worked with patient-derived oral tumour samples that better reflect variations among Indian patients and that oral cancer cells are vulnerable to the moderate mechanical stimulations produced by ultrasound.

According to IISc, this vulnerability appears to arise from reduced levels of Tropomyosin 2.1, a mechanosensory protein that helps body cells sense and withstand physiologically relevant mechanical stimulation. When exposed to ultrasound-driven mechanical stimulation, oral cancer cells underwent selective cell death, while healthy oral epithelial cells remained unharmed.

Novelty of study

“The novelty of this study lies in showing how ultrasound mechanostimulation can selectively target oral cancer cells by exploiting their mechanical weakness. Instead of using heat or drugs, this approach uses moderate mechanical forces to damage cancer cells beyond their ability to recover,” said Ajay Tijore, Assistant Professor at the Department of Bioengineering, IISc, and corresponding author.

The team also found that ultrasound drastically reduces the cancer cells’ ability to migrate and invade surrounding tissue.

Intriguingly, using a 3D co-culture platform that mimics the oral tumour microenvironment, the team found that ultrasound disrupted the dense capsule-like barrier formed by cancer-associated cells around the tumour core. Such barriers prevent drugs and immune cells from reaching the tumour core, resulting in treatment failure.

Consistency of response

“What surprised us most was the consistency of the response across cancer cells derived from multiple patients from different cancer stages. They were highly vulnerable to ultrasound, while normal cells were much less affected,” said Rashmita Luha, PhD student in the Department of Bioengineering and first author.

IISc said that since ultrasound is non-invasive and already approved for various medical uses, these findings suggest that ultrasound mechanostimulation could exploit the mechanical weakness of oral cancer cells.

Targeted treatment

It added that with further validation in advanced preclinical models, this approach may help develop safer, more targeted treatment strategies for oral cancer and potentially other easily accessible cancers such as breast and skin cancers.

“The clinical collaboration was very important because it allowed us to work with patient-derived oral tumour samples rather than relying only on standard cell lines developed in Western countries. In the future, we want to test this approach in more physiologically relevant models and explore whether ultrasound can be combined with existing treatments to improve drug penetration and therapeutic outcomes,” said Tijore.

Published – July 02, 2026 08:27 pm IST



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