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Fighting cancer with Zika

Preliminar­y results of study shows virus may be able to treat childhood cancer

- By Naseem S. Miller Staff writer

Dr. Kenneth Alexander was driving home one day last year when he thought of the idea: what if the Zika virus could be used to kill a childhood cancer called neuroblast­oma?

The Zika outbreak was in its third year and scientists had learned that the virus damages the nervous systems of unborn babies by destroying the developing nerve cells.

Those developing up neuroblast­omas.

So, Alexander, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Nemours Children’s Hospital, started brainstorm­ing with a surgeon colleague and brought on board Dr. Griffith Parks, a University of Central Florida scientist who has been studying Zika.

After nearly a year of research, the team published the preliminar­y results of their first study, showing that neuroblast­oma cells that were exposed to the Zika virus in the laboratory died 10 days after being infected, making the virus a potential treatment for the cancer.

The team’s findings published in One.

“This is like all good ideas. It’s early and there may be a fly in the ointment,” Alexander said. “But at this point things are looking promising. The path ahead is there and we hope to get lots of other people interested in this research.”

Neuroblast­oma is the cancer of nerve cells that reside outside of the brain. It’s the second most common type of childhood Dr. Tamarah Westmorela­nd, nerve cells also make PLOS cancer and has a disproport­ionately high mortality rate compared to other childhood cancers. It mostly affects infants and children under age 5.

Treatment usually involves surgery, chemothera­py or radiation, or a combinatio­n in high-risk cases. In some cases, none of the treatments works.

“There’s a lot of research on neuroblast­oma, but we wanted to take a different approach [to finding a treatment],” said study co-author Dr. Tamarah Westmorela­nd, a pediatric general and thoracic surgeon at Nemours. “I think Zika is holding great promise. In looking at these results, we think it can be used [along with] current therapies. However, we’re very early in this research.”

The Orlando team isn’t the first to look at the cancer-killing potential of Zika.

Several groups, including one in the U.S. and one in Brazil, have shown in preliminar­y studies that Zika infection killed glioblasto­ma cells in the adult brain, potentiall­y opening new doors for treating this aggressive and common type of brain cancer.

Another Brazilian group reported in June that a Zika virus strain killed aggressive cancerous tumors of the central nervous system.

Alexander said what’s unique about his team’s research is identifica­tion of a surface protein called CD24.

The protein makes cancer cells susceptibl­e to being killed by the Zika virus. Cancer cells that didn’t have the CD24 protein didn’t respond to Zika, Alexander’s team found in its laboratory research.

“So with these findings, we can ask what Dr. Tamarah Westmorela­nd said her group wanted to “take a different approach [to finding a treatment]” for childhood cancer neuroblast­oma.

other cancers express CD24,” said Alexander. “Now we’re beginning to look at other cancer cells that express CD24 to see if we can kill them as well.”

Scientists don’t fully know how the virus enters and destroys the cells. There may be proteins in addition to CD24 that make a cell susceptibl­e to Zika.

“But at least we’ve story,” said Alexander.

This is not the first time a virus has been used to treat cancer, the history of which dates back to the 1940s. More recently, a modified form of the herpes virus has been used to treat melanoma.

Alexander said that, based on his team’s preliminar­y findings, the Zika virus won’t have to be modified from its natural form because fully grown nerve cells are immune to the virus.

“We’ve got this fortuitous situation, where the virus can make a subset of people really sick. But for the majority of us, it’s a non-serious infection,” he said.

Most children and adults who are infected with the virus don’t develop any symptoms or have a mild, cold-like reaction.

Alexander said the potential therapy could be an injection, much like how mosquitoes infect humans. Or an injection to the site of an excised tumor to prevent the return of the cancer.

The team is now taking the research out of Petri dishes and into rodents.

Alexander and Parks, interim associate dean of research and director of the Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences, are also planning to study how the CD24 interacts with the Zika virus.

Parks deferred an

Alexander.

“I think Zika is holding great promise. In looking at these results, we think it can be used [along with] current therapies. However, we’re very early in this research.”

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