Drug for disease may help in cancer fight, early research finds
An off-patent malaria drug could help to destroy
cancer cells by making them more susceptible to radiotherapy, according
to early work that has prompted British scientists to start a clinical trial.
Researchers
reported on Monday that atovaquone boosted oxygen levels in tumour
cells in mice, making radiotherapy more effective against a range of
cancer types, including lung, bowel, brain and head and neck cancer.
Cancer
cells with low oxygen levels are more difficult to treat with
radiotherapy and are more likely to spread to other parts of the body.
"We have now started a clinical trial ...to see if we can show the same results in cancer patients," said lead researcher Gillies McKenna of the Cancer Research UK Radiation Research Centre in Oxford.
"We
hope that this existing low-cost drug will mean that resistant tumours
can be re-sensitised to radiotherapy. And we're using a drug that we
already know is safe."
His team's findings were published in the journal Nature Communications.
The
idea of repurposing existing drugs to fight cancer is gaining traction
as scientists realise that older medicines can sometimes complement
other therapies.
The fact that such drugs are
already off patent means they are cheap, but the lack of patent
protection is also a potential problem because drug companies investing
in late-stage research have less certainty of a commercial payback.
Atovaquone
is used to both treat and prevent malaria. It is usually prescribed to
travellers as Malarone, a combination of atovaquone and proguanil
developed by GlaxoSmithKline.
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