Audio By Carbonatix
Breast cancer cells can destroy a powerful immune response in the body and allow the disease to spread to the patient's bones, researchers in Australia reported on Monday.
They also experimented with two ways to reinstate this immune response to help patients fight breast cancer, but it will take more tests and several more years for these therapies to become routine treatments, they said.
"We have identified a way that breast cancer cells can turn off the immune system, allowing them to spread to distant parts such as the bone," said Belinda Parker, a research fellow at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, who led the study.
"By understanding how this occurs, we hope to use existing and new therapies to restore this immune function and prevent the spread of cancer," she said by telephone.
The study was published on Monday in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Medicine.
In 2010, 1.5 million people were diagnosed with breast cancer, the top cancer in women around the world.
Although it kills many women in developing countries, 89 percent of women diagnosed with breast cancer in western countries are still alive five years after diagnosis thanks to detection tests and treatment.
Using tissue samples from breast cancer patients and experiments with mice, Parker and colleagues found that a gene called IRF7 is switched off in patients whose cancer spreads to other parts of the body.
IRF7 controls the production of interferon, an important type of immune protein that fights viruses and bacteria apart from tumor cells
"Usually when breast cancer cells leave the breast and travel in the bloodstream and into bone marrow, the release of interferons by IRF7 will cause the immune system to recognize those cells and eliminate them," Parker said.
"But by losing IRF7, it prevents the stimulation of immune responses and allows those cells to hide from being recognized (and later spread)."
Parker and her team tried two ways to revive this immune response in mice experiments and both appeared to work.
"We put the gene back into cancer cells so it can't switch it (IRF7) off. We allowed the immune pathway to be stimulated and the cancer cells did not spread to the bone," Parker said.
"The other way is to treat the animals with interferon, which is available for treating other diseases, like hepatitis. That also prevented the spread of cancer to the bone."
Parker said they will study how best to use these two methods on patients in the next few years and plan to have a clinical trial in two to three years.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Mahamud Iddi wins TCL Electronics worth GH¢100,000 in EGL’s Akye3de3 Kese3 Promotion
2 hours -
Lands Minister, NAIMOS mourn fallen soldier killed during anti-galamsey operation in Obuasi
2 hours -
Ghana Impact Project donates $20k to restore mobility for children
2 hours -
JoyNews’ Kwaku Asante named Best Radio and TV Journalist in Parliamentary Reporting
3 hours -
Education Ministry updates EMIS indicators to strengthen ICT integration in schools
4 hours -
Interior Ministry declares Christmas, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day public holidays
4 hours -
President Mahama directs Finance Ministry to disburse $78m for completion of Takoradi–Agona-Nkwanta road
4 hours -
Interior Minister lauds NIA staff for dedication, pledges continued government support
4 hours -
First Atlantic Bank will run a “proper and decent business” to protect shareholder value – CEO
5 hours -
First Atlantic Bank targets African expansion as IPO strengthens capital, governance
5 hours -
First Atlantic Bank CEO attributes IPO and GSE listing decision to renewed confidence in Ghana’s economy
5 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Bechem United end All Blacks 6-game unbeaten run
5 hours -
Eggs fly off shelves as shoppers throng The Multimedia Group’s X’mas Egg Market on final day
6 hours -
Bankable energy: Why Africa’s downstream sector is the next global investment frontier
6 hours -
Working Capital Management: Do’s and don’ts to consider for 2026
7 hours
