Yorkshire Post

Scientists offer new hope for prostate cancer

-

RESEARCHER­S HAVE raised hopes of new treatments for prostate cancer after discoverin­g a protein in bone marrow that acts like a “magnet” for unhealthy cells.

Scientists used the discovery to disable prostate cancer in the laboratory.

Once it begins to spread, or metastasis­e, prostate cancer often gravitates to the bones for reasons that are not well understood.

The University of York team found that the bone protein provides a docking point for passing prostate cancer cells.

Once docked, a signal from the surface of a tumour cell to its nucleus causes it to start multiplyin­g.

Lead scientist Professor Norman Maitland said: “Without this docking station, the ‘ship’, or cell, will just float around, not causing any further harm. The receptors on the ‘docking station’, or the protein in bone, act like a magnet for the receptors on the stem cells of the cancer and once it is ‘docked’, getting rid of the cancer becomes much harder.”

In laboratory experiment­s, the team succeeded in blocking the cancer-driving growth signal using a non-toxic drug already tested for the treatment of allergic asthma. As a result, cancer cells survived but their ability to multiply and spread further was disabled. Immobilisi­ng prostate cancer in this way could slow down metastasis or increase the effectiven­ess of other treatments such as chemothera­py, said the scientists.

Prof Maitland said: “We know that this works in human cancer cells, but what we now need to find is the correct dosage of the drug in patients.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom