The Asian Age

‘ Altitude sickness drug slows brain tumour growth’

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Washington, July 10: A drug used to treat altitude sickness, glaucoma, epilepsy, heart failure and seizures may also help patients with a fast- growing brain tumour live longer, according to a study.

The drug, acetazolam­ide, sold under the trade name Diamox, is “cheap to make, easy to take and has limited side effects,” said

Bahktiar Yamini, a professor at the University of Chicago Medicine in the US.

The most common side effect of Diamox is a metallic taste when drinking something carbonated, according to the study published in the

journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine.

The most frequently used chemothera­py for gliomas is a drug called temozolomi­de ( TMZ). However, not all patients respond to this drug. Median survival with this disease is about 14 months.

TMZ acts by damaging DNA in ways that can kill tumour cells. But some tumour cells are able to block or repair this type of DNA damage. This limits the drug's impact.

The researcher­s found that most glioma patients with high levels of a protein called BCL- 3 ( B cell CLL/ lymphoma 3) were unresponsi­ve to the beneficial effects of TMZ.

BCL- 3 shields cancer cells from TMZ damage by activating a protective enzyme known as carbonic anhydrase II.

Acetazolam­ide, however, is a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor. It can restore TMZ's ability to kill tumour cells. Adding acetazolam­ide to TMZ enabled mice with gliomas to survive longer.

“We tested this combinatio­n treatment strategy in several animal models,” Yamini said.

It cured some of them. Others had a 30 to 40 per cent increase in survival time, researcher­s said.

When Yamini and colleagues looked at BCL- 3 level from previous human studies, they found that patients with lower levels of BCL- 3 who were treated with TMZ survived longer.

“An important feature of predictors like BCL- 3 is that they are informativ­e. They can identify pathways to improve treatment response,” the researcher­s said.

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