Islamabad,
Jan 10 : Scientists investigating the cancer-fighting properties of
artesunate -- a drug commonly used to treat malaria -- have found early evidence
that combining it with an existing cancer drug has the potential to make each
drug more effective than when used alone.
They also found that regular
treatment breaks could improve success levels.
The findings, recently
published in the International Journal of Cancer, are the result of tests on
human cancer cells studied outside the body (in vitro studies) by Dr Wai Liu and
Professor Angus Dalgleish at St George's, University of
London.
Artesunate is well-known for combating malaria by reducing the
amount of malaria-infected cells in the body that cause the disease -- and a
number of scientific studies have already found that it may have the same effect
on cancerous cells, consequently reducing the size of the cancer. This latest
study adds further evidence to this theory. It also suggests that, in addition
to actively killing infected cells to reduce the size of the cancer, artesunate
may have the ability to prevent the disease from developing further by stunting
the growth of the individual cancerous cells that cause the disease. They found
that which effect it takes to combat the disease varies depending on the type of
cancer.
The researchers analysed how four different types of human cancer
cells -- two of which represented cancer of the colon, and the others breast and
lung -- reacted to artesunate when it was used both alone and in combination
with other anti-cancer drugs.
They found that artesunate prevented the
cancer from growing in all four types of cell lines tested, in addition to
reducing the size of the cancer in those cell lines derived from breast and lung
cancer.
The researchers then combined artesunate with other common
anti-cancer drugs in an attempt to boost activity, and this showed favourable
responses with a drug called lenalidomide. When used together, these two drugs
increased the effectiveness of the treatment in all four types of cancer cells
tested, and had the largest effect on the lung cancer cells. When used
separately, artesunate reduced the amount of lung cancer cells, or the size of
the cancer, by 20 per cent, whilst lenalidomide reduced its size by 10 per cent.
However, by using the two together, at the same concentrations, the cancer was
reduced by around 60 per cent.
Dr Liu says: "We combined our lead drug
called lenalidomide with the widely available drug artesunate, and showed that
the overall activity of the drugs was boosted to a point that was greater than
the sum of the two individual drugs, indicating that the two drugs have a
cooperative relationship."
The research also indicates that artesunate
could be made more effective at reducing the size of the cancer if used in
shorter bursts, separated by drug-free periods. The researchers showed that with
this treatment pattern, the cancer's size was reduced where artesunate had
previously only been preventing the cancer from growing. The introduction of
drug-free periods was also shown to further reduce the size of the cancerous
mass where it was already being reduced without the drug-free periods. For
example, in the breast cancer cell lines, a continuous exposure to artesunate
achieved just a 10 per cent reduction in the size of the cancer, but the
reduction with drug-free period was increased to over 50 per cent.
Dr Liu
says: "Whilst stunting cell growth is a useful effect, destroying the cells to
reduce their numbers is the preferred effect. These two processes are actually
linked together, to the extent that if a drug inhibits cell growth it will
inadvertently inhibit the ability of the cells to be destroyed. We have shown
that by using short bursts of artesunate, the cancer cells regain the ability to
be destroyed."
He concludes that: "Whilst these studies are conducted on
cells outside the body and reactions can vary in the human body, this research
provides new insight into how artesunate interacts with cancer drugs and
different treatment patterns to combat cancer, and provides a starting point
from which studies can be based."
Ends
SA/EN
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» More evidence that malaria drug could help combat cancer
More evidence that malaria drug could help combat cancer
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