Home Page Contact Us Site Map
Home    Articles      Facts      Charity      Lawyers      Directory      Add a Link      Clinical Trials
Statins Reverse Doxorubicin Resistance in Mesothelioma Cells
Statins reverse doxorubicin resistance in human malignant mesothelioma cells in culture ...more
83 Year Old Man Dies from Mesothelioma Days After Winning Compensation
AN employee of a former ice cream factory has died of an asbestos-related disease ...more
New Research Findings
New Research Findings Published In National Academy Of Sciences Journal ...more
Air quality agency collects record asbestos fines
The Bay Area Air Quality Management District has collected $430,000 in asbestos fines ...more
Professor from Loyola joins isle cancer center
Dr. Michele Carbone, lead investigator for two National Cancer Institute grants ...more
CuraGen and TopoTarget Announce Initiation of NCI-sponsored Phase II Clinical Trial with PXD101 for Mesothelioma
Announced today the initiation of patient dosing in a Phase II clinical trial evaluating the activity of PXD101 ...more
Actor Paul Gleason dies from Mesothelioma
'The Breakfast Club' actor Paul Gleason dies at 67 ...more
Mesothelioma and Virotherapy

Mesothelioma and Virotherapy

April, 25 2007

Virotherapy Shows Promise in Treating Mesothelioma: Viruses may also be engineered to kill ovarian cancer and glioma cells by Jeni Baker

In the rapidly emerging field of virotherapy, scientists are researching many viruses as prospective agents, and many diseases as prospective targets. Mesothelioma, in particular, is long overdue for advances in treatment.

A recently published study* suggests that virotherapy may be a viable treatment option for this lethal form of lung cancer, as well as for other cancers.

An agent of change for patients with “no real treatment alternatives”

“Normally, viruses replicate to increase their number, and by virtue of that process, healthy cells are killed,” explains David T. Curiel, MD, PhD, director of the Division of Human Gene Therapy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “Virotherapy is about engineering viruses so that they replicate only in tumor cells – and kill only tumor cells.”

The catch is that in order to engineer an effective virus, scientists must first understand the molecular workings of the cancer. An adenovirus-based virotherapy agent is engineered by incorporating a tumor specific promoter (TSP) into virus genes. The TSP restricts the expression of certain genes and viral replication in tumor cells, while sparing in normal cells.

“Not much is known about the biology of mesothelioma,” Curiel says, so it was a significant step forward when his team – led by Zeng B. Zhu, MD – identified a new TSP called survivin and confirmed its relationship to mesothelioma with laboratory and animal studies. (All studies were supported by the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation.)

This discovery set the stage for the team to design a virotherapy agent effective against mesothelioma – a disease that has not seen an improvement in outcomes resulting from new therapies in 20 years, Curiel says – and the researchers have engineered a virus that replicates in mesothelioma cells and spares normal cells.

But while the scientific community is starting to make strides toward treating patients with mesothelioma – “a population with no real treatment alternatives,” Curiel says – and people at high risk for developing the disease, Curiel warns that “simply because we’re beginning to understand mesothelioma on this level, we shouldn’t expect to see a downtick in the number of cases.”

That’s because of mesothelioma’s long latency period. Although the disease is caused primarily by asbestos exposure – and asbestos has been disappearing in this country for a long time – mesothelioma’s life cycle and predictable demographic are such that we’ll continue to see an increase in cases for years, making the disease an ideal target for virotherapy, says Curiel.

“Mesothelioma is typically localized in the chest cavity, and virotherapy can optimize our ability to target and contain it,” he says. “We can concentrate the virus in the area where it will be most effective – and cause minimal damage to healthy cells.”

What’s next?

In addition to their virotherapy work with mesothelioma, University of Alabama researchers also have adapted an early diagnostic test for the disease, which will be the subject of future work.

There is evidence that virotherapy can be effective in treating other types of cancer, as well, Curiel says. Last month the University of Alabama at Birmingham got FDA approval to begin investigating the use of virotherapy as a treatment for ovarian cancer, and a national clinical trial will begin in May.

Alabama researchers are also collaborating with scientists at MD Anderson Cancer Center and the Free University of Amsterdam to investigate the efficacy of virotherapy in treating glioma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.

So stay tuned. And speak with your doctor to learn more about virotherapy and cancer.

SOURCE: Cancer Monthly published Apr 25, 2007


General Information About Malignant Mesothelioma
Stages of Malignant Mesothelioma
Asbestos Exposure: Q & A
Mesothelioma: Q & A
Metastatic Cancer: Q & A
Cancer of Unknown Primary Origin
Treatment Options Overview
Treatment Options for Malignant Mesothelioma
To Learn More
If you or someone you love has recently been diagnosed with malignant mesothelioma, then find out the necessary facts about your legal rights by requesting FREE information.
Articles       Facts       Charity       Lawyers       Directory       Add a Link       Clinical Trials       State Coverage