Patients with advanced cancer that has spread to many
different sites often do not have many treatment options, since they would be unable to tolerate the doses of treatment they would need to kill the tumors.
Researchers at City of Hope and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital may have found a way to treat cancers that have spread throughout the body more effectively. They used modified neural stem cells to activate and
concentrate chemotherapeutic drugs predominately at tumor sites, so that normal tissue surrounding the tumor and throughout the body remain relatively unharmed.
“This approach could significantly improve future treatment options for patients with metastatic cancer,” said Karen Aboody, M.D., assistant professor of Hematology/Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation and Neurosciences at City of Hope. “It not only has the potential to destroy residual tumor cells, but it should also improve patients’ quality of
life by minimizing toxic side effects such as nausea, diarrhea or bone marrow suppression.”
Patients with advanced cancer that has spread to many
different sites often do not have many treatment options, since they would be unable to tolerate the doses of treatment they would need to kill the tumors.
Researchers at City of Hope and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital may have found a way to treat cancers that have spread throughout the body more effectively. They used modified neural stem cells to activate and
concentrate chemotherapeutic drugs predominately at tumor sites, so that normal tissue surrounding the tumor and throughout the body remain relatively unharmed.
“This approach could significantly improve future treatment options for patients with metastatic cancer,” said Karen Aboody, M.D., assistant professor of Hematology/Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation and Neurosciences at City of Hope. “It not only has the potential to destroy residual tumor cells, but it should also improve patients’ quality of
life by minimizing toxic side effects such as nausea, diarrhea or bone marrow suppression.”
For more ...
http://www.rxpgnews.com/cancer-research/Stem-Cell-Therapy-Effective-In-Targeting-Metastatic-Cancer_9759.shtml