PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Old cancer drug could have new use in fighting cancer

Study opens door for more research on old cancer drugs

2015-04-01
(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, Mo. - A drug used for decades to treat leukemia may have other uses in the fight against cancer, researchers at the University of Missouri have found. Previously, doctors used 6-Thioguanine, or 6-TG, as a chemotherapy treatment to kill cancer cells in patients with leukemia. In recent years, many doctors have shelved 6-TG in exchange for newer drugs that are more effective. Now, Jeffrey Bryan, an associate professor of oncology at the MU College of Veterinary Medicine, and his colleagues found that 6-TG can not only kill cancer cells, but also works to change how certain cancer cells function, weakening those cells so they can be killed by other drugs.

Every cell in the body has certain genetic characteristics called epigenetic markers that give cells instructions on how to act, when to multiply and when to die. Cancer cells often have epigenetic markers that cause genes to be either turned off or out of control. This causes those cells to grow rapidly, become difficult to kill and ultimately damage the body. When testing the drug on cells from dogs with cancer, the MU researchers found that 6-TG can affect these epigenetic markers in cancer cells through a chemical process called demethylation. This process works to turn off damaging epigenetic markers and turn on markers that make the cells act in a healthy manner. Bryan says this discovery could lead to future cancer treatments using multiple drugs to fight the disease from different sides.

"While 6-TG is no longer one of the more powerful cancer-killing drugs doctors have at their disposal, we found that it could still be useful to fight cancer in conjunction with other drugs," said Bryan, who also is the director of the Comparative Oncology and Epigenetics Laboratory at MU. "If we can use 6-TG to turn off dangerous markers in cancer cells so that those cells become easier to kill, we then can use more powerful cancer-killing drugs to eliminate the cells for good."

Bryan says this research could potentially open doors for future research on other old cancer drugs that are no longer used by doctors. By re-examining other potential uses for these old drugs, Bryan says more effective treatments could be found. He also says that doing this research on dogs with cancer could translate well to human diseases.

"Epigenetic markers work similarly in dogs and humans, so we expect to see similar results with these drugs in humans as we do in dogs," Bryan said. "This is 'a one step back, two steps forward' approach to cancer research. Gaining approval from the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) to use new drugs to treat human diseases is a difficult, time-intensive process. By examining alternate uses of old drugs in dogs, we hope to be able to expedite that process down the road when we introduce these novel combination treatments in humans."

INFORMATION:

This study was published in BMC Veterinary Research. Bryan's co-authors include Senthil Kumar, an assistant research professor and assistant director of the Comparative Oncology and Epigenetics Laboratory at the MU College of Veterinary Medicine, and Brian Flesner, a former resident at the MU College of Veterinary Medicine and current faculty member at Louisiana State University.

The early-stage results of this research are promising. If additional studies, including animal studies, are successful within the next few years, the researchers will request permission from the federal government to begin human drug testing. After this status has been granted, Bryan and his colleagues may conduct human clinical trials in conjunction with oncologists at the MU Ellis Fischel Cancer Center with the hope of developing new treatments.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Texting too tempting for college students even when inappropriate

2015-04-01
College students may realize that texting in the shower or at a funeral is inappropriate, but many do it anyway, according to Penn State psychologists. "We have looked at inappropriate texting behavior -- texting while driving, for instance -- before, but what we wanted to find out is whether the people who are engaging in these forms of behavior even know whether or not it is the right thing to do," said Marissa Harrison, associate professor of psychology, Penn State Harrisburg. The researchers suggest that college students are not necessarily trying to create new ...

New in the Hastings Center Report April 2015

2015-04-01
Why It's Not Time for Health Care Rationing Peter A. Ubel There is a notable change in professional debates about how to better control health care costs. Discussion of health care rationing has become much more muted. "I contend that debates about health care rationing have waned not because the need to ration has dwindled nor because ethical debates about how or whether to ration have been resolved," writes Peter A. Ubel. They have declined because the word "rationing" has been replaced by terms such as "value" that "are not burdened by emotional and historical baggage." ...

Wayne State study of brain networks shows differences in children with OCD

2015-04-01
DETROIT - A new study by scientists at the Wayne State University School of Medicine demonstrates that communication between some of the brain's most important centers is altered in children with obsessive-compulsive disorder. The research led by the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience's David Rosenberg, M.D., and Vaibhav Diwadkar, Ph.D., sheds significant light on our understanding of how brain networks contribute to obsessive-compulsive disorder in youth. The study included youth with a diagnosis of OCD and a comparison group free of psychiatric illness. ...

Student helps to discover new pain relief delivery method

2015-04-01
A Chemistry undergraduate at the University of York has helped to develop a new drug release gel, which may help avoid some of the side effects of painkillers such as ibuprofen and naproxen. In a final year project, MChem undergraduate student Edward Howe, working in Professor David Smith's research team in the Department of Chemistry at York looked for a way of eliminating the adverse side-effects associated pain-killing drugs, particularly in the stomach, and the problems, such as ulceration, this could cause patients. Supervised by PhD student Babatunde Okesola, whose ...

Oral pain specialists treat complex health issues, according to new survey

2015-04-01
Andres Pinto, an orofacial pain and oral medicine specialist at Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine, often feels like the doctor in the television series House, who solves medical mysteries each week. Pinto is among about 700 facial pain and oral medicine specialists nationally who patients often turn to when their own doctors are unable to identify and treat complex and rare medical conditions. In fact, according to a new study Pinto conducted with input from fellow members of the American Academy of Oral Medicine (AAOM), patients see, on average, ...

Migrating immune cells promote nerve cell demise in the brain

2015-04-01
A small area in the midbrain known as the substantia nigra is the control center for all bodily movement. Increasing loss of dopamine-generating neurons in this part of the brain therefore leads to the main symptoms of Parkinson's disease - slowness of movement, rigidity and shaking. In recent years, there has been increasing scientific evidence suggesting that inflammatory changes in the brain play a major role in Parkinson's. So far, it has been largely unclear whether this inflammation arises inside the brain itself or whether cells of the innate immune system that ...

Predicting chronic pain in whiplash injuries

2015-04-01
Large amount of fat in neck muscles predicts chronic pain, disability and PTSD Will enable earlier treatment for whiplash victims Fat indicates atrophy, shows the chronic pain is not psychological Whiplash affects more than 4 million Americans annually CHICAGO --- While most people should expect to fully recover from whiplash injuries within the first few months, about 25 percent have long-term pain and disability that lasts many months or years. Using special MRI imaging, Northwestern Medicine scientists have identified, within the first one and two weeks ...

Lifting families out of poverty -- with dignity

Lifting families out of poverty -- with dignity
2015-04-01
EAST LANSING, Mich. --- America's welfare state is quietly evolving from needs-based to an employment-based safety net that rewards working families and fuels dreams of a better life, indicates a new study led by a Michigan State University scholar. The major reason: the little-known Earned Income Tax Credit, a $65 billion federal tax-relief program for poor, working families. The program has been expanded dramatically during the past 25 years, while cash welfare has been sharply curtailed. Reporting in the April issue of the American Sociological Review, Jennifer Sykes ...

Story tips from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, April 2015

2015-04-01
ENVIRONMENT - Invertebrates' role in bioaccumulation ... By studying fish and invertebrates in a creek with known mercury contamination, researchers are gaining a better understanding of the relationship between the toxin in the stream and bioaccumulation in organisms. While mercury concentrations in East Fork Poplar Creek in Oak Ridge, Tenn., have decreased significantly over the last 30 years, levels in tissue from fish have remained the same or increased. To understand why, a team led by Monica Poteat of Oak Ridge National Laboratory is examining the intricacies of ...

Study finds EITC bolsters recipients' self-respect while helping them financially

2015-04-01
WASHINGTON, DC, April 1, 2015 -- America's welfare state is quietly evolving from needs-based to an employment-based safety net that rewards working families and fuels dreams of a better life, indicates a new study led by a Michigan State University (MSU) scholar. The major reason: the little-known Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), a $65 billion federal tax-relief program for poor, working families. The program has been expanded dramatically during the past 25 years, while cash welfare has been sharply curtailed. Reporting in the April issue of the American Sociological ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Sleeping in on weekends may help boost teens’ mental health

Study: Teens use cellphones for an hour a day at school

After more than two years of war, Palestinian children are hungry, denied education and “like the living dead”

The untold story of life with Prader-Willi syndrome - according to the siblings who live it

How the parasite that ‘gave up sex’ found more hosts – and why its victory won’t last

When is it time to jump? The boiling frog problem of AI use in physics education

Twitter data reveals partisan divide in understanding why pollen season's getting worse

AI is quick but risky for updating old software

Revolutionizing biosecurity: new multi-omics framework to transform invasive species management

From ancient herb to modern medicine: new review unveils the multi-targeted healing potential of Borago officinalis

Building a global scientific community: Biological Diversity Journal announces dual recruitment of Editorial Board and Youth Editorial Board members

Microbes that break down antibiotics help protect ecosystems under drug pollution

Smart biochar that remembers pollutants offers a new way to clean water and recycle biomass

Rice genes matter more than domestication in shaping plant microbiomes

Ticking time bomb: Some farmers report as many as 70 tick encounters over a 6-month period

Turning garden and crop waste into plastics

Scientists discover ‘platypus galaxies’ in the early universe

Seeing thyroid cancer in a new light: when AI meets label-free imaging in the operating room

Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio may aid risk stratification in depressive disorder

2026 Seismological Society of America Annual Meeting

AI-powered ECG analysis offers promising path for early detection of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, says Mount Sinai researchers

GIMM uncovers flaws in lab-grown heart cells and paves the way for improved treatments

Cracking the evolutionary code of sleep

Medications could help the aging brain cope with surgery, memory impairment

Back pain linked to worse sleep years later in men over 65, according to study

CDC urges ‘shared decision-making’ on some childhood vaccines; many unclear about what that means

New research finds that an ‘equal treatment’ approach to economic opportunity advertising can backfire

Researchers create shape-shifting, self-navigating microparticles

Science army mobilizes to map US soil microbiome

Researchers develop new tools to turn grain crops into biosensors

[Press-News.org] Old cancer drug could have new use in fighting cancer
Study opens door for more research on old cancer drugs