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Unconventional treatment strategy controls cancer, rather than eradicating it

24 Feb 2016
Unconventional treatment strategy controls cancer, rather than eradicating it

Can we learn to live with--rather than kill--cancer?

A new study suggests that frequent, low-dose chemotherapy that keeps tumour growth under control may be more effective than standard high-dose chemotherapy that seeks to eradicate cancer cells completely.

The treatment strategy, which was tested in mice, flies in the face of conventional cancer therapy, which generally hits patients with the maximum drug dose possible to kill off the largest number of tumour cells.

Despite aggressive treatment, complete cancer eradication is rare and toxic side effects all too common.

Recently, researchers have questioned the benefits of standard chemotherapy because while it destroys drug-sensitive tumour cells, it leaves behind drug-resistant cells.

By eliminating the former population of tumour cells, the drug allows resistant cells to take over and drive tumour growth uncontrolled.

Taking into account the evolutionary forces that drive cancer resistance, Pedro Enriquez-Navas and colleagues designed an evolution-based treatment strategy that adjusts the drug dose based on how the tumour responds.

Rather than trying to shrink the tumour completely, the so-called adaptive therapy seeks to stabilise the tumour by maintaining a small population of drug-sensitive tumour cells to suppress the growth of resistant cells.

The researchers tested the approach with the chemotherapy drug paclitaxel in mice with two different types of breast cancer.

Standard chemotherapy shrunk the mouse breast tumours, but only to have them grow back as soon as treatment stopped.

Another treatment regimen that skips doses whenever the tumour shrunk also inevitably resulted in tumour progression.

In contrast, adaptive therapy consisting of high initial drug doses followed by progressively lower doses as the tumour responded was more effective in controlling tumour growth than either standard therapy or dose skipping.

In fact, the treatment allowed between 60 and 80% of the mice to be weaned off the drug completely without relapsing for an extended period of time.

A related Focus by Giannoula Klement discusses how the study's eco-evolutionary model of cancer may prompt researchers and clinicians to rethink current therapeutic strategies for cancer.

SourceAmerican Association For The Advancement Of Science