Is it better to 'contain' rather than destroy cancer?

By Maria Cohut
Fact checked by Gianna D'Emilio
A
new approach to cancer therapy suggests that doctors may be able to keep cancer
in check by placing metastatic cells in a state of dormancy, thus blocking them
from giving rise to new tumors. A recent study in mice has found that an
existing drug could effectively contain metastatic breast cancer cells.
"Most
cancer therapy is targeted with the idea that we want to kill all of the cancer
cells. Rid the body of cancer," says Michael Wendt, an assistant professor
at Purdue University, in West Lafayette, IN.
However,
the researcher — who specializes in the treatment of metastatic cancer —
explains that this approach may not be feasible.
"Recently,"
Wendt notes, "there are lots of studies that suggest that we're never
going to be able to do that. Cancer cells evolve so fast that they will always
find a way to overcome any type of therapy."
Because
of this, Wendt and a team of scientists from Purdue University and other
academic institutions have decided to experiment with a different approach to
treating cancer: that of safely containing it and blocking it from developing
and spreading.
"An
emerging concept in cancer treatment is that maybe we shouldn't try to kill all
of the cancer cells, but try to keep them in a low state that doesn't generate
any kind of symptoms. A sort of dormancy, if you will," Wendt explains.
In
the new study — the findings of which appear in the journal Cancer Research —
the investigators used an existing drug to stop metastatic breast cancer cells
from giving rise to new tumors by keeping them in a sleep-like state.
Existing
drug can block stray cancer cells
The
researchers zeroed in on the drug fostamatinib, which is currently approved for
the treatment of immune thrombocytopenia, an autoimmune disease characterized
by a low platelet count in the blood.
The
team explains that their research in mice has shown that fostamatinib is also
able to contain metastatic cancer cells and stop them from developing into full
tumors, causing further damage.
First
author Aparna Shinde, Ph.D. — a former graduate student at Purdue and now a
researcher at AbbVie, a biopharmaceutical company — in collaboration with Wendt
and the team, looked at whether they could block metastatic breast cancer
cells.
That
is because, Shinde explains, breast cancer cells can spread to other parts of
the body, where they can enter a latent state for many years, escaping detection.
Once
awakened, these metastatic cells give rise to new and sometimes more aggressive
and less treatable tumors, marking the return of the cancer a long time after
the treatment of the primary tumors.
"After
you have breast cancer, you always get this dissemination of cancer cells.
Breast cancer is no longer considered a curable disease — it is now considered
a chronic disease because 10 or 20 years later, you can get secondary tumors
because of the metastasizing cells," says Shinde.
Such
cells often do not respond to existing therapies, and for this reason, Shinde
and team thought that it could be more useful to try to contain the cells and
block their development, rather than attempt to destroy them altogether.
"So
that's the goal we are exploring now," Wendt observes, noting that the
study authors' research question has been, "Instead of trying to eliminate
those disseminated cells, how do we keep them in that dormant state?"
'Very
difficult' to organize clinical trials
Shinde,
Wendt, and colleagues went on to experiment with fostamatinib because they knew
that the drug inhibits the activity of spleen tyrosine kinase, a protein
present in latent metastatic cancer cells.
Working
with mouse models of breast cancer, the researchers found that, when they
treated metastatic cancer cells with this drug, those cells remained contained
and did not give rise to new tumors.
"This
is great for us because this is a drug with low toxicity. It's designed for
people with chronic disease so that they can take [it] for a long time. So we
think fostamatinib is a perfect candidate for this kind of years-long
lock-'n'-block type of approach."
-Aparna
Shinde, Ph.D.
"We
think this is a good candidate to move forward for a trial to see if we can
stabilize dormancy. If [spleen tyrosine kinase] is expressed in other cancers,
this could apply to those as well," Shinde hypothesizes.
However,
while the researchers are happy about their current findings and the promising
implications for future therapeutic strategies, they note that it may be difficult
to test this approach further, in clinical trials.
"Our
work is unique because there hasn't been much research that tests treatments in
a postsurgical metastatic setting," says Wendt.
"But
you can imagine that [setting up] clinical trials for this kind of thing is
going to be very difficult because, technically, the patients are in remission
and disease-free," he adds.
"We
suspect that these patients have these dormant cancer cells disseminating
through their bodies, but we don't have a way to detect those right now,"
he goes on, suggesting that the road toward marking fostamatinib as a new
therapeutic option for cancer may be long and difficult.
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
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