Iran Daily

Cutting off cervical cancer’s fuel supply stymies tumors

-

Researcher­s at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found that cervical tumors that don’t respond to radiation may be vulnerable to therapies that also attack the cancer’s fuel supply.

The study was published in the journal Cancer Research, xinhuanet. com reported.

Studying mice implanted with human cervical cancer cells, the researcher­s wiped out many of the animals’ tumors with a combinatio­n of radiation and three drugs that target tumor metabolism.

The researcher­s used three different drugs, alone and in combinatio­n, to deprive cervical tumors of glucose and block downstream metabolic pathways that help protect cancer cells from building up toxic free radicals.

Two of the drugs are investigat­ional and approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) for use in people as part of clinical trials; the third drug is Fda-approved to treat rheumatoid arthritis.

The researcher­s tested the drug combinatio­ns against four different human cervical cancer cell lines.

One of the cell lines was vulnerable to being cut off from glucose alone, but the others needed more interferen­ce.

All four cancer cell lines responded significan­tly to radiation plus the three-drug combinatio­n.

One cell line was wiped out entirely. Researcher­s noted that the mice did not show obvious negative side effects of this therapy.

When being cut off glucose, a cancer cell is forced to scavenge for an alternativ­e fuel.

With the tumor in this vulnerable state, the researcher­s strike again by shutting down the cell’s ability to mitigate the toxic stew it creates from its own deranged metabolism. The treatment essentiall­y forces the cell to drown in its own toxicity.

Historical­ly, cervical cancer is difficult to study in the lab because most cases are caused by human papillomav­irus (HPV), and there is no equivalent infection in mice.

Senior author Julie K. Schwarz, an associate professor of radiation oncology at Washington University School of Medicine, said, “Ninety to 95 percent of cervical cancer cases are Hpv-related, and there are very few studies of this type of cancer in mice because HPV is a human virus.

“It’s very difficult to produce a mouse model of a solid tumor of the type we see in most women who are diagnosed with cervical cancer.

“We believe what we learn from studying cervical cancer will help improve treatments for any Hpv-driven cancer.”

 ??  ?? labchemcor­p.com
labchemcor­p.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran