Like other cancers, tumor cells in Ewing sarcoma - a rare bone cancer that
primarily affects children and young adults - have to keep repairing their faulty DNA to
survive. Buy Altace (Ramipril) with free Rx Now, a team of researchers shows two drugs that interfere with this process work
together very effectively to kill the cancer cells in lab cultures and mice.
The researchers found that the drug combination inhibited cell proliferation and facilitated cell
death in lab cultures of Ewing sarcoma cancer cells and mice with tumors.
The team - including members from the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute
(IDIBELL) in Barcelona, Spain - describes the finding in the journal
Oncotarget.
Ewing sarcoma tumors usually grow in the hip bones, the ribs, or in the middle of long
bones, such as the legs or arms. Buy Xylocaine (Lidocaine) It can also grow in the spine and soft tissue around the
bone.
Most Ewing tumors are diagnosed in teenagers, but they can also affect children and
young adults in their 20s and 30s. Actos (Pioglitazone) with free Rx Each year in the US, around 250 children and teenagers
are diagnosed with a Ewing tumor - most of which will be Ewing sarcoma of bone.
The 5-year survival rate for people with a Ewing tumor that has not spread is about
70%. About Clomid without prescription If the tumor has spread (metastasized) when the disease is diagnosed, the 5-year
survival drops to less than half of this.
The most common mutation that causes Ewing sarcoma involves two genes - the EWSR1 gene
on chromosome 22 and the FLI1 gene on chromosome 11. Buy Cialis Super Active (Tadalafil) with free Rx These changes occur during a
person s lifetime and are only present in tumor cells. Buy Minerals online They are not inherited.
The new study builds on previous research that suggested some types of Ewing sarcoma
could be particularly sensitive to a group of drugs called PARP inhibitors, if used in
combination with DNA damage repair agents.
Olaparib and Trabectedin combination was highly synergistic
Cancer cells - like healthy cells - rely on DNA repair to maintain their genetic
integrity in order to multiply and spread. http://webmd-board.blogspot.com There are a number of cellular processes that
carry out DNA repair. One such process relies on a family of proteins called PARP.
However, many cancers favor PARP as the DNA repair mechanism, which is why PARP
inhibitors were developed to treat cancer. One type of PARP inhibitor is a drug called
Olaparib - one of the drugs that the study investigates.
Olaparib blocks the action of PARP1, a gene that triggers DNA repair when damage is
detected.
The other drug the study investigates - Trabectedin - is also used as an anti-tumor treatment. It works by
causing breaks and abnormal DNA structure in cancer cells, which in turn triggers cell
death.
The researchers tested the effect of the two drugs together on Ewing sarcoma. They ran
two sets of tests - one on cancer cells (in vitro) and the other on mice implanted with
grafts of human Ewing sarcoma tumors (in vivo).
In their study paper, they note how the "combination of Olaparib and Trabectedin was
found to be highly synergistic." It inhibited cell proliferation and facilitated cell
death. In the mice, the tumors showed complete regression.
Senior author Enrique de Alava, of the Instituto de Biomedicina de Sevilla (IBiS) and
the Virgen del Rocio Hospital in Seville, concludes:
"Our results demonstrate that the combination of Trabectedin and Olaparib
could be a new therapeutic strategy that should be studied in greater depth so that it
can benefit patients with this disease in the near future."
In February 2014, Medical News Today also learned about an earlier
international study led by IDIBELL that suggested a
treatment option for metastatic Ewing sarcoma might be found in switching off the
gene SIRT1, which codes for the protein Sirtuin1.
In that study, the team showed that overexpression of Sirtuin1 was very significantly
linked to metastasis in samples from patients with Ewing sarcoma.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
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