Quantcast
Channel: chemotherapy Archives - The Good Men Project
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 90

Discovery Could Crack Prostate Cancer Drug Resistance

$
0
0

 

By WASHINGTON STATE

The discovery opens the door to new treatment strategies that could overcome this resistance. This could ultimately help extend the lives of those with prostate cancer, one of the leading causes of cancer deaths among men.

Led by a team of scientists at Washington State University, the study showed that blocking CHRM1 in resistant prostate cancer cell lines and an animal model based on patient-derived resistant tissue restored docetaxel’s ability to kill cells and stop tumor growth. The researchers did this by using dicyclomine, a drug that selectively inhibits CHRM1 activity. Dicyclomine is already on the market as a generic drug and is currently used to treat symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome.

“The effect was pretty dramatic in all the experimental models we tested,” says Boyang (Jason) Wu, an associate professor in the Washington State University College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences and co-senior author of the study. “And because dicyclomine already has a clinical use, this work has immediate translational potential.”

Published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine, the researchers’ findings support clinical testing to confirm whether combined use of docetaxel and dicyclomine could help overcome treatment resistance in prostate cancer patients. Docetaxel resistance can develop in prostate cancer after about six months of treatment. Chemotherapy drugs like docetaxel are among very few options available to patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer, a lethal form of the disease that no longer responds to hormone therapy.

Wu says this type of combination therapy could also potentially be used for other cancers that are currently being treated with docetaxel, such as breast and lung cancer. It may also be possible to use the same combination strategy with other similar chemotherapy drugs.

In addition to testing resistant cancer cell lines, the research team also tested cells that still responded to docetaxel treatment. They found that using dicyclomine to block CHRM1 in these cells made docetaxel more efficient at killing them. Wu says that this shows that prostate cancer patients could potentially benefit from a combination treatment strategy even before docetaxel resistance develops.

“What this suggests is that the lowest effective dose of docetaxel may be lower when the drug is combined with dicyclomine, compared to when docetaxel is used alone,” Wu says. “Being able to use a lower dose could help reduce unwanted side effects and make treatment more manageable for patients.”

Additional researchers from the University of Washington, Medical University of Innsbruck in Austria, and National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University in Taiwan contributed to the work.

Funding for this study came from a US Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Research Program grant with additional support provided by the National Cancer Institute, a component of the National Institutes of Health, and WSU College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences startup funds.

Source: Washington State University

Previously Published on futurity.org with Creative Commons License

***


Join The Good Men Project as a Premium Member today.

All Premium Members get to view The Good Men Project with NO ADS. A $50 annual membership gives you an all access pass. You can be a part of every call, group, class and community. A $25 annual membership gives you access to one class, one Social Interest group and our online communities. A $12 annual membership gives you access to our Friday calls with the publisher, our online community.

Register New Account

Choose your subscription level

By completing this registration form, you are also agreeing to our Terms of Service which can be found here.

    Need more info? A complete list of benefits is here.

Photo credit: unsplash

The post Discovery Could Crack Prostate Cancer Drug Resistance appeared first on The Good Men Project.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 90

Trending Articles