Chrome 2001
.
Aetna Intelihealth InteliHealth Aetna Intelihealth Aetna Intelihealth
 
     
.
. .
.
Home
Health Commentaries
InteliHealth Dental
Drug Resource Center
Ask the Expert
Interactive Tools

InteliHealth Policies
Site Map

   Advertisement
Mindbloom Ad .
Diseases & Conditions Healthy Lifestyle Your Health Look It Up
Health News Health News
.
Health News
333
Medications
Schizophrenia Drug May Help Prevent Some Cancers from Recurring: Study
Schizophrenia Drug May Help Prevent Some Cancers from Recurring: Study
canadianp_eng_2012_05_24_eng-canadianp_homefamily_eng-canadianp_homefamily_11312
TORONTO (Canadian Press) -- An antipsychotic drug used as a therapy for schizophrenia appears to have an unusual property -- it can neutralize some cancer stem cells that allow tumours to come back after treatment.
1441772
InteliHealth
2012-05-24
t
General Health News
2012-06-23
.

Schizophrenia Drug May Help Prevent Some Cancers from Recurring: Study
May 24, 2012

TORONTO (Canadian Press) -- An antipsychotic drug used as a therapy for schizophrenia appears to have an unusual property -- it can neutralize some cancer stem cells that allow tumours to come back after treatment.

In lab experiments, Canadian researchers found that thioridazine can alter cancer stem cells that give rise to a type of leukemia, as well as those that generate certain breast cancer cells, without harming normal stem cells.

The discovery, reported Thursday in the journal Cell, came after researchers screened about 3,000 compounds in search of those that would selectively inhibit human cancer stem cells.

Thioridazine is one of about 20 agents winnowed down through high-tech drug screening that appear to work against cancer stem cells, said principal investigator Mick Bhatia, scientific director of the Stem Cell and Cancer Research Institute at McMaster University.

"Cancer stem cells, what they do is they keep proliferating," Bhatia said from Hamilton. "But they don't do what normal stem cells do, which is make other cell types. And then those cells perform their function and then die. That's the normal life cycle.

"Cancer stem cells refuse to go through that life cycle because they never differentiate. They just keep making copies of themselves."

That's why, even if a patient's malignancy appears to have been eradicated with chemotherapy and-or radiation, the cancer can come back, Bhatia said.

"And the feeling there is that the drugs we're using aren't targeting the cancer stem cells, so you're not getting to the root. You're just picking the dandelion off the top.

"And it looks good for a while, the lawn looks fine, but if you don't dig at it and get the root, it just comes back."

Bhatia admits that thioridazine's power over cancer stem cells came as a bit of a surprise. The drug works against schizophrenia, for example, by targeting dopamine receptors in the brain. The medication is also used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease.

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that plays a variety of roles in the brain, including helping to regulate attention, cognition and movement.

The drug doesn't appear to kill cancer stem cells, but rather encourages them to differentiate, thus exhausting the pool of self-renewing cells.

The researchers showed that thioridazine affects leukemia stem cells without harming normal blood stem cells. It turns out that unlike normal blood stems cells, leukemia cells have a dopamine receptor on their surfaces -- making them vulnerable to the drug.

Dopamine receptors also appear on some breast cancer stem cells, the researchers found.

"This gives us some explanation," Bhatia said. It also suggests that dopamine receptors might serve as a biomarker for early detection of rare, tumour-initiating cells in patients.

The research team, which includes physicians, is already planning to test thioridazine in combination with standard anti-cancer drugs in a small group of adults with acute myeloid leukemia who have not responded to chemotherapy alone.

The research team's next step is to investigate the effectiveness of thioridazine in other types of cancer, as well as exploring the potential of the other drugs it identified, Bhatia said.

"We really want these drugs to be something that we can target at a clinical level."

(c) The Canadian Press, 2012

.
InteliHealth
. . . .
.
More News
InteliHealth .
.
General Health
Top News
This Week In Health
Addiction
Allergy
Alzheimer's
Asthma
Arthritis
Babies
Breast Cancer
Cancer
Caregiving
Cervical Cancer
Children's Health
Cholesterol
Complementary & Alternative Medicine
Dental / Oral Health
Depression
Diabetes
Ear, Nose And Throat
Environmental Health
Eyes
Family Health
Fitness
Genetics
Headache
Health Policy
HIV / AIDS
Heart Health
Lung Cancer
Medications
Infectious Diseases
Men's Health
Nutrition News
Mental Health
Multiple Sclerosis
Nutrition Guide
Parkinson's
Pregnancy
Prevention
Prostate Cancer
Senior Health
Sexual / Reproductive Health
Sleep
Tobacco Cessation
STDs
Stress Reduction
Stroke
Weight Management
Today In Health History
Women's Health
Workplace Health
.
.
.
.
InteliHealth

   
20787,
cancer,dopamine,leukemia,drug,brain,breast cancer,cell,life cycle,schizophrenia
21291
.
.  
This website is certified by Health On the Net Foundation. Click to verify.
.
Chrome 2001
Chrome 2001