Tumour-growth 'system'
targeted
Scientists
say they may be able to turn off a "system" that helps bowel tumours
survive and grow bigger.
The University of Bristol team says it has found how a cancer detects
the need for more blood vessels to supply it with the oxygen it needs to grow.
It may be possible to "switch off" this detection system and
kill off tumours, the researchers say. Their work, published in the journal
Nature Cell Biology, could help improve drugs to fight these cancers. Bowel
cancer is the second biggest cancer killer in the UK, with approximately 17,000
people dying from the disease every year - about half of those diagnosed.
Experts
need to find differences between the make-up of cancer cells and normal cells
in order to discover ways to kill one, without harming the other.
One of the most important differences in bowel cancers are the tactics
employed by the cell to survive past the point an ordinary cell would normally
die. Bowel cancer cells produce a chemical which bypasses this "cell
suicide" and stimulates uncontrolled growth, eventually forming a cluster
of cancer cells called a tumour.
This cell cluster eventually needs an improved blood supply in order to
be able to carry on growing - if it cannot get extra blood, the cells will
starve to death.
Sending for blood
The Bristol team found that the tumour can sense when this is about to
happen, and at that point, the chemical that triggers its growth changes role,
and helps form a chemical messenger which instructs the body to create new
blood vessels around the tumour.
This process is called angiogenesis, and doctors have already created
drugs - such as Avastin - designed to interfere with
this.
However, the new research, which looks at the process in more detail,
could help create more precisely targeted drugs, which can turn off
angiogenesis without some of the side-effects risked by those taking the
current generation of chemotherapy.
Professor Chris Paraskeva, who led the
research, explained: "We believe it is essential to understand the
survival strategies of cancers as they grow, and how they develop resistance to
treatment therapies.
"These cancers are incredibly smart and constantly adapt to their
environment in order to survive - we have just got to be smarter.
"We hope to use this new information to try and interfere with the
tumour's survival tactics and thereby kill it off."
Long-term illness
Dr Rob Glynne-Jones, a clinical oncologist at
Mount Vernon Hospital in London, and a scientific adviser to the charity Bowel
Cancer UK, said the project had produced "interesting" results.
He said: "This is another step forward towards more specific drug
treatments which do not carry as high a risk of side-effects in some patients.
"I have no doubt that in the future drugs will be produced which
will turn cancer into a long-term chronic illness, managed by the patient over
far longer periods."
This research was funded by Cancer Research UK. Its medical director,
Professor John Toy, said: "Bowel cancer is one of the most common cancers
in Britain, so research aimed at reducing this toll is vitally important.
"This discovery adds to our understanding of how bowel cancer cells
survive when their oxygen and food supplies become severely reduced, and could
lead to new cancer treatments.
"We
look forward to seeing the team's research progress in further laboratory
studies and hope eventually to see it translate to clinical trials in
patients."
source: http://news.bbc.co.uk