Pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) are emerging as a non-invasive adjunct in cancer therapy. Initially approved for orthopedic applications such as bone healing and tissue regeneration, PEMF has demonstrated broader biological effects including modulation of inflammation, angiogenesis, cellular metabolism, and signal transduction. Increasing experimental and early clinical evidence suggests that specific electromagnetic field exposures may inhibit tumor cell proliferation, induce apoptosis, disrupt mitotic spindle formation, and impair angiogenesis across multiple cancer types. This review synthesizes findings from studies investigating low- and high-intensity PEMF, intermediate-frequency tumor-treating alternating electric fields, and tumor-specific amplitude-modulated radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (AM-RF EMF) in cancer cell lines, animal models, and preliminary human clinical trials. Across these modalities, therapeutic responses appear highly dependent on field strength, frequency, waveform, exposure duration, and tumor biology. While intermediate-frequency alternating electric fields selectively target dividing cells through mitotic disruption, AM-RF EMF protocols have demonstrated early clinical activity in hepatocellular carcinoma and other malignancies without significant toxicity. Low- and higher-intensity PEMF exposures have also shown antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects in diverse tumor models, often enhancing sensitivity to chemotherapy, radiation, and targeted therapies. Despite encouraging results, clinical translation remains limited due to mechanistic heterogeneity and the absence of standardized treatment protocols. To address these challenges, this review proposes a framework integrating cancer genomics, structural biology, and thermodynamic modeling to guide rational design of electromagnetic field therapies. By estimating the electromagnetic field strengths required to perturb protein–ligand interactions or disrupt key oncogenic signaling pathways, PEMF protocols may be tailored to individual tumor molecular profiles. Although current biophysical estimates remain preliminary, they provide a conceptual basis for hypothesis-driven optimization. Rigorous randomized clinical trials, mechanistic validation, and standardized exposure parameters will be essential to establish the role of PEMF as a precision, mechanism-informed component of multimodal cancer therapy.
| Published in | Cancer Research Journal (Volume 14, Issue 1) |
| DOI | 10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12 |
| Page(s) | 6-16 |
| Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
| Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2026. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields, Oncology, Electromagnetic Therapy, Cell Proliferation, Mitotic Disruption, Structural Biology, Cancer Driver Genes, Non-invasive Therapy
Gene | Mutation Frequency | Primary Pathway | Major Cancer Types | Therapeutic Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
TP53 | >50% all cancers | Cell cycle checkpoint/Apoptosis | Pan-cancer (highest in ovarian, lung) | MDM2 inhibitors, p53 reactivators |
KRAS | ~30% all cancers | RAS/MAPK signaling | Pancreatic (90%), Colorectal (40%), Lung (25%) | KRAS G12C inhibitors (sotorasib, adagrasib) |
PIK3CA | ~20% solid tumors | PI3K/AKT/mTOR | Breast (45%), Colorectal (15%), Endometrial | PI3K inhibitors (alpelisib) |
APC | 80% colorectal | Wnt signaling | Colorectal, Gastric | Wnt pathway modulators (experimental) |
Gene | Mutation Frequency | Primary Pathway | Major Cancer Types | Therapeutic Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BRCA1/BRCA2 | 5-10% breast/ovarian | Homologous recombination | Breast, Ovarian, Prostate, Pancreatic | PARP inhibitors (olaparib, niraparib) |
ATM | 5-15% various | DNA damage response | CLL, Breast, Prostate | ATR inhibitors, PARP inhibitors |
MLH1/MSH2/MSH6/PMS2 | 15% colorectal | Mismatch repair | Colorectal, Endometrial, Lynch syndrome | Immune checkpoint inhibitors |
Gene | Mutation Frequency | Primary Pathway | Major Cancer Types | Therapeutic Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
EGFR | 15% lung adenocarcinoma | RTK/MAPK signaling | Lung, Glioblastoma, Head/Neck | TKIs (erlotinib, osimertinib) |
HER2 (ERBB2) | 20% breast cancer | RTK signaling | Breast, Gastric | Trastuzumab, T-DM1, TKIs |
ALK | 5% lung adenocarcinoma | RTK fusion proteins | Lung, Lymphomas | ALK inhibitors (crizotinib, alectinib) |
Gene | Mutation Frequency | Primary Pathway | Major Cancer Types | Therapeutic Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
ARID1A | 10-50% various | SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling | Ovarian, Endometrial, Gastric | Synthetic lethal approaches |
KMT2D | 20% lymphomas | Histone methylation | Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma | Histone methyltransferase inhibitors |
IDH1/IDH2 | 70% gliomas, 20% AML | Metabolic/Epigenetic | Glioma, AML, Cholangiocarcinoma | IDH inhibitors (ivosidenib, enasidenib) |
Gene | Mutation Frequency | Primary Pathway | Major Cancer Types | Therapeutic Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
CDKN2A (p16) | 30-50% various | G1/S checkpoint | Melanoma, Pancreatic, Lung | CDK4/6 inhibitors |
RB1 | 90% retinoblastoma | G1/S checkpoint | Retinoblastoma, Small cell lung | CDK4/6 inhibitors, aurora kinase inhibitors |
CCND1 | 15-20% breast | G1/S progression | Breast, Mantle cell lymphoma | CDK4/6 inhibitors (palbociclib) |
Discovery | Context | Primary Pathway | Cancer Types | Therapeutic Potential |
|---|---|---|---|---|
74 New Candidate Genes | Nature Genetics 2024 (10,478 genomes) | RNA processing, protein degradation | Pan-cancer analysis | Under investigation |
Non-coding drivers | Regulatory elements, lncRNAs | Gene expression regulation | Multiple cancer types | Epigenetic modulators |
Target (substrate) | PDB/AlphaFold ID2 | Keq (M-1)3 | B (mT)1 |
|---|---|---|---|
GTPase switch protein | |||
Hras (GTP) | PDB 8ELK | 9.3x1010 | 625 |
Kras (Raf1 Ras BD) | PDB 6XHA | 2.8 x 106 | 130 |
Protein tyrosine kinase | |||
c-Abl (ATP) | AF-P00520-F1 | 8.3 x 104 | 18 |
ALK (ATP) | AF-Q9UM73-F1-v4 | 2.4 x 105 | 28 |
BTK (ATP) | AF-Q06187-F1 | 3.4 x 104 | 43 |
EGFR (ATP) | AF-P00533-F1 | 5.9 x 104 | 28 |
HER2 (ATP) | AF-P04626-F1 | 3.7 x 104 | 23 |
c-kit (ATP) | AF-P10721-F1-v4 | 1.9 x 104 | 18 |
SRC (ATP) | AF-P00523-F1-v4 | 1.2 x 104 | 102 |
VEGFR1 (ATP) | AF-P17948-F1 | 7.7 x 103 | 6 |
VEGFR2 (ATP) | AF-P35968-F1 | 7.7 x 103 | 10 |
Protein serine/threonine kinase | |||
AKT1 (ATP) | AF-P31749-F1 | 7.6 x 103 | 36 |
AKT2 (ATP) | AF-P31751-F1 | 3.9 x 103 | 53 |
ATR (ATP) | AF-Q13535-F1-v4 | 2.0 x 107 | 28 |
Aurora 2 (ATP) | AF-O14965-F1 | 2.9 x 104 | 30 |
Cdk2-PO4/Cyclin A (ATP) | PDB 1JST | 4.3 x 104 | 57 |
Cdk2/Cyclin E (ATP) | PDB 1W98 | 2.8 x 105 | 44 |
Cdk4/Cyclin D1 (ATP) | PDB 2W96 | 2.4 x 103 | 33 |
Cdk6/vCyclin (ATP) | PDB 1JOW | 1.2 x 105 | 61 |
Chk1 (ATP) | AF-O14757-F1 | 7.1 x 105 | 72 |
Chk2 (ATP) | AF-O96017-F1 | 3.0 x 105 | 30 |
pERK1 (ATP) | PDB 2ZOQ | 3.2 x 105 | 71 |
pERK2 (ATP) | PDB 6OPG | 5.5 x 105 | 63 |
GSK3β (ATP) | AF-49841-F1 | 2.0 x 104 | 44 |
MEK1 (ATP) | AF-Q02750-F1 | 1.8 x 105 | 58 |
RAF1 (ATP) | AF-P04049-F1 | 8.6 x 104 | 36 |
Lipid phosphoinositol kinase | |||
ATM (ATP) | PDB 7NI6 | 3.4 x 104 | 19 |
PIK3CA (ATP) | AF-P42336-F1 | 5.0 x 105 | 49 |
MTOR (ATP) | PDB 3JBZ | 1.0 x 103 | 15 |
Other enzymes | |||
PARP1 (NAD) | AF-P09874-F1-v4 | 1.3 x 106 | 29 |
PARP2 (NAD) | AF-Q9UGN5-F1-v4 | 5.3 x 105 | 25 |
IDH1 (Isocitrate) | PDB 3INM | 1.5 x 104 | 306 |
IDH2 (Isocitrate) | PDB 5I95 | 1.7 x 105 | 230 |
PEMF | Pulsed electromagnetic fields |
TTFields | Tumor treating fields |
ROS | Reactive oxygen species |
AM | Amplitude-modulated |
RF-EMF | Radiofrequency electromagnetic fields |
EMT | Epithelial-mesenchymal transtion |
LDH | Lactate dehydrogenase |
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APA Style
Le, H. V. (2026). Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields in Cancer Therapy: A Review of Experimental and Clinical Evidence. Cancer Research Journal, 14(1), 6-16. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12
ACS Style
Le, H. V. Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields in Cancer Therapy: A Review of Experimental and Clinical Evidence. Cancer Res. J. 2026, 14(1), 6-16. doi: 10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12
@article{10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12,
author = {Hung Van Le},
title = {Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields in Cancer Therapy:
A Review of Experimental and Clinical Evidence},
journal = {Cancer Research Journal},
volume = {14},
number = {1},
pages = {6-16},
doi = {10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12},
url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12},
eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.crj.20261401.12},
abstract = {Pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) are emerging as a non-invasive adjunct in cancer therapy. Initially approved for orthopedic applications such as bone healing and tissue regeneration, PEMF has demonstrated broader biological effects including modulation of inflammation, angiogenesis, cellular metabolism, and signal transduction. Increasing experimental and early clinical evidence suggests that specific electromagnetic field exposures may inhibit tumor cell proliferation, induce apoptosis, disrupt mitotic spindle formation, and impair angiogenesis across multiple cancer types. This review synthesizes findings from studies investigating low- and high-intensity PEMF, intermediate-frequency tumor-treating alternating electric fields, and tumor-specific amplitude-modulated radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (AM-RF EMF) in cancer cell lines, animal models, and preliminary human clinical trials. Across these modalities, therapeutic responses appear highly dependent on field strength, frequency, waveform, exposure duration, and tumor biology. While intermediate-frequency alternating electric fields selectively target dividing cells through mitotic disruption, AM-RF EMF protocols have demonstrated early clinical activity in hepatocellular carcinoma and other malignancies without significant toxicity. Low- and higher-intensity PEMF exposures have also shown antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects in diverse tumor models, often enhancing sensitivity to chemotherapy, radiation, and targeted therapies. Despite encouraging results, clinical translation remains limited due to mechanistic heterogeneity and the absence of standardized treatment protocols. To address these challenges, this review proposes a framework integrating cancer genomics, structural biology, and thermodynamic modeling to guide rational design of electromagnetic field therapies. By estimating the electromagnetic field strengths required to perturb protein–ligand interactions or disrupt key oncogenic signaling pathways, PEMF protocols may be tailored to individual tumor molecular profiles. Although current biophysical estimates remain preliminary, they provide a conceptual basis for hypothesis-driven optimization. Rigorous randomized clinical trials, mechanistic validation, and standardized exposure parameters will be essential to establish the role of PEMF as a precision, mechanism-informed component of multimodal cancer therapy.},
year = {2026}
}
TY - JOUR T1 - Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields in Cancer Therapy: A Review of Experimental and Clinical Evidence AU - Hung Van Le Y1 - 2026/03/10 PY - 2026 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12 DO - 10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12 T2 - Cancer Research Journal JF - Cancer Research Journal JO - Cancer Research Journal SP - 6 EP - 16 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8214 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.crj.20261401.12 AB - Pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) are emerging as a non-invasive adjunct in cancer therapy. Initially approved for orthopedic applications such as bone healing and tissue regeneration, PEMF has demonstrated broader biological effects including modulation of inflammation, angiogenesis, cellular metabolism, and signal transduction. Increasing experimental and early clinical evidence suggests that specific electromagnetic field exposures may inhibit tumor cell proliferation, induce apoptosis, disrupt mitotic spindle formation, and impair angiogenesis across multiple cancer types. This review synthesizes findings from studies investigating low- and high-intensity PEMF, intermediate-frequency tumor-treating alternating electric fields, and tumor-specific amplitude-modulated radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (AM-RF EMF) in cancer cell lines, animal models, and preliminary human clinical trials. Across these modalities, therapeutic responses appear highly dependent on field strength, frequency, waveform, exposure duration, and tumor biology. While intermediate-frequency alternating electric fields selectively target dividing cells through mitotic disruption, AM-RF EMF protocols have demonstrated early clinical activity in hepatocellular carcinoma and other malignancies without significant toxicity. Low- and higher-intensity PEMF exposures have also shown antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects in diverse tumor models, often enhancing sensitivity to chemotherapy, radiation, and targeted therapies. Despite encouraging results, clinical translation remains limited due to mechanistic heterogeneity and the absence of standardized treatment protocols. To address these challenges, this review proposes a framework integrating cancer genomics, structural biology, and thermodynamic modeling to guide rational design of electromagnetic field therapies. By estimating the electromagnetic field strengths required to perturb protein–ligand interactions or disrupt key oncogenic signaling pathways, PEMF protocols may be tailored to individual tumor molecular profiles. Although current biophysical estimates remain preliminary, they provide a conceptual basis for hypothesis-driven optimization. Rigorous randomized clinical trials, mechanistic validation, and standardized exposure parameters will be essential to establish the role of PEMF as a precision, mechanism-informed component of multimodal cancer therapy. VL - 14 IS - 1 ER -