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| Scientists are looking to telomerase for answers |
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Starving tumors,
vaccinating against cancer, programming cell death, and unlocking cancer
secrets with lab-grown cancer cells are among the promising new avenues
of cancer research to be explored in the first few years of this new millennium,
according to Dawn Willis, PhD, director of research promotion and communication
at the American Cancer Society (ACS).
"Advances in genetics, of course, underlie many recent breakthroughs
in our understanding of cancer and new ways of detecting and treating the
disease," Dr. Willis said. "Cancer research is particularly exciting –
and challenging – at this point in history. Whole new sets of tools are
being developed for investigating cancer, and with these new tools comes
the need for great care and responsibility in their use."
Among these tools are drugs to inhibit angiogenesis, the formation of
blood vessels. Harvard/Boston Children’s Hospital researcher Judah Folkman,
MD, proposed in 1971 the concept of starving tumors of their blood supply
via anti-angiogenesis and later discovered the first angiogenesis inhibitor
molecule. Therapy with cancer drugs known to have anti-angiogenic properties
has led to elimination of cancer in laboratory mice and to dramatic tumor
regression in some patients. Dr. Folkman received his first angiogenesis
grant from the ACS.
Clinical studies are now underway to more carefully evaluate the role
of anti-angiogenesis in preventing and treating cancer. Cancer researchers
will continue to share their discoveries with heart disease researchers,
who actually promote angiogenesis to nourish damaged heart muscle with
a fresh blood supply.
Vaccines as Cancer Treatment
Vaccinations against polio, measles, and other infectious diseases
were among the most compelling medical breakthroughs of the 20th century,
and vaccines used as treatment for many types of cancer may well make news
in this early part of the 21st century, Dr. Willis said.
ACS Clinical Research Professor Ronald Levy, MD, of Stanford University,
and others are using a vaccine-like treatment to help patients with B-cell
lymphoma and multiple myeloma. In 1999, investigators reported on promising
vaccines for treating men with prostate cancer. "The vaccines are used
as therapy, tailor-made individually to each person's tumor, to induce
the patient's immune system to destroy the tumor," Dr. Willis said. In
addition, a number of researchers are studying preventive vaccine strategies
to counter exposure to infectious agents such as the human papillomavirus
associated with cervical cancer and H pylori, a bacterium linked to stomach
cancer.
Scientists are looking at the tumor suppressor gene known as p53 and
the protein it produces as keys to "programming" the death of cancer cells.
Cellular suicide or apoptosis is part of a cell’s normal life cycle, but
when the process goes wrong, the result can be unchecked cell growth and
tumor formation. Scientists such as Waun Ki Hong, MD, of M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center at the University of Texas, Houston, are evaluating ways
to restore normal p53 function through gene therapy. Dr. Hong is an ACS
clinical research professor.
Scientists Look to Telomerase
In addition, the enzyme telomerase continues to be of great interest
to cancer researchers. Telomeres are bits of DNA attached to the ends of
chromosomes by telomerase. Unless telomeres are replaced by telomerase,
chromosomes get shorter and lose information each time the cell divides.
Non-cancerous cells die when they loses too much crucial information, but
an overabundance of telomerase can keep cancer cells dividing indefinitely.
ACS Research Professor Robert Weinberg, PhD, of the Whitehead Institute
for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, Mass., used this accumulating knowledge
about telomerase and apoptosis to create for the first time, human cancer
cells in the laboratory. Scientists are searching for an anti-telomerase
drug.
This greater understanding of what specific genetic steps move a cell
from normal to cancer is demystifying the cancer process and is pointing
to even more hopeful areas of research, Dr. Willis said. The entire human
genetic material, or genome, will be sequenced within a few years. Already,
scientists are using DNA microchips to discover new cancer-related genes.
Eventually, it will be possible to screen a person's DNA at birth and
predict what diseases he or she is likely to get, what environmental exposures
they should avoid, what prevention strategies they should adopt, and what
treatments are likely to be successful when they do become ill, according
to Dr. Willis. This may cause ethical problems in relation to things like
insurance and job discrimination.
"And, of course, the greatest advance of the next century will be something
that no one has yet predicted, or even imagined," Dr. Willis concluded.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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