Friday, September 02, 2011

Virus Slows Cancer Spread...Holds Key to Possible Cure


An engineered virus, injected into the blood, can selectively target cancer cells throughout the body in what researchers have labelled a medical first. The virus attacked only tumours, leaving the healthy tissue alone, in a small trial on 23 patients, according to the journal Nature.

Using viruses to attack cancers is not a new concept, but they have needed to be injected directly into tumours in order to evade the immune system. Scientists  in Canada modified the vaccinia virus, which is more famous for being used to develop a smallpox vaccine. The virus, named JX-594, is dependent upon a chemical pathway, common in some cancers, in order to replicate.

It was injected at different doses into the blood of 23 patients with cancers which had spread to multiple organs in the body. "I believe that some day, viruses and other biological therapies could truly transform our approach for treating cancer,” said Prof John Bell of the University of Ottawa.

 In the eight patients receiving the highest dose, seven had the virus replicating in their tumours, but not in healthy tissue. Prof  Bell, lead researcher, said: "We are very excited because this is the first time in medical history that a viral therapy has been shown to consistently and selectively replicate in cancer tissue after intravenous infusion in humans. Intravenous delivery is crucial for cancer treatment because it allows us to target tumours throughout the body as opposed to just those that we can directly inject."

Infection prevented further tumour growth in six patients for a time.  The virus did not cure the cancer. Patients were given only one dose of the virus as the trial was designed to test the safety of the virus.
It is thought that the virus could be used to deliver treatments directly to cancerous cells in high concentrations and perhaps more than one treatment for longer lasting or possibly curative effects
Prof Bell acknowledges that the research is still in the very early stages.
Cancer Research UK's Prof Nick Lemoine, also director of Barts Cancer Institute, said: "Viruses that multiply in just tumour cells - avoiding healthy cells - are showing real promise as a new biological approach to target hard-to-treat cancers.  "This new study is important because it shows that a virus previously used safely to vaccinate against smallpox in millions of people can now be modified to reach cancers through the bloodstream - even after cancer has spread widely through the patient's body.  It is particularly encouraging that responses were seen even in tumours like mesothelioma, a cancer which can be particularly hard to treat."

Great news and renewed hope.

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