Source - http://www.bbc.co.uk/
By -
Category - Trip To San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn
By -
Category - Trip To San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn
| Trip To San Diego |
A commonly used blood pressure drug could help fight cancer by opening up blood vessels in solid tumours.
Used beside conventional cancer-fighting drugs, it could improve life expectancy, experts believe.
Following successful testing in mice, doctors plan to give
losartan to patients with pancreatic cancer to see if it can tackle this
hard-to-treat disease, Nature Communications reports.
Currently, only 5% of pancreatic cancer patients survive for at least 5 years.
This is partly because only one in 10 people with the disease has a tumour that is operable.
Future hope
Investigators at the Massachusetts General Hospital in the US
are currently recruiting volunteer patients with inoperable pancreatic
cancer to test out the new drug combination of chemotherapy plus
losartan.
Although the treatment will not cure them, the
researchers hope it will give the patients more months or years of life
than they might otherwise get.
Losartan has been used for more than a decade as a safe blood pressure medication.
It works by making the blood vessels relax or dilate so that they can carry more blood, easing pressure.
The Massachusetts team found that the drug was beneficial in mice with breast and pancreatic cancer.
It improved blood flow in and around the tumours allowing more of the chemotherapy drugs to be delivered to their target.
Mice given this treatment, rather than standard chemotherapy alone, survived for longer.
Dr Emma Smith of Cancer Research UK said: "This interesting
study in mice sheds light on why drugs for hypertension might improve
the effectiveness of chemotherapy, but we don't yet know if they work
exactly the same way in people.
"The fact that these drugs are already widely used to treat
high blood pressure will hopefully cut down the amount of time it will
take to test their potential in treating cancer but they may not be safe
for all patients or when combined with other cancer treatments, so we
need to wait for the answers from clinical trials which are already
under way."
No comments:
Post a Comment