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Effort
Underway to Improve Quality of Life and Survivability for Cancer
Patients
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(ARA)
- Three years ago, Dr. Melanie Bone, 43, a gynecologist
from West Palm Beach, Fla., was fighting for her life. She
had been diagnosed with stage three breast cancer, which
required aggressive treatment. She underwent a bilateral
mastectomy, then endured six months of chemotherapy and 33
radiation treatments before finally being declared cancer
free. |
“Chemotherapy
is what ultimately cured me of cancer, but I wouldn’t wish it
on my worst enemy. I was sick all the time", says Dr.
Boone.
While
undergoing treatment, she became anemic, lost all her hair and
her ability to taste and smell. “The sores and ulcers that
formed in my mouth made drinking and eating very uncomfortable.
At one point, my white blood count got so low, I had to actually
move out of my house. I have four kids and my doctor was
concerned they’d bring home a bug I couldn’t fight off.”
says Dr. Bone.
Chemotherapy
drugs are very effective, but since they are indiscriminate --
meaning they target both cancer and healthy cells -- they can be
toxic. Pro-Pharmaceuticals, a drug development company in
Newton, Mass., is conducting human trials right now on a new
drug that targets cancer cells and leaves healthy cells alone.
It’s called DAVANAT-1.
“It’s
a sugar-based compound we believe can increase the human body’s
tolerance to highly toxic chemotherapy drugs,” says Anthony
Spueglia of Pro-Pharmaceuticals.
DAVANAT-1
is a combination of the highly effective chemotherapy drug 5FU
and DAVANAT, a carbohydrate compound named after two of the
scientists who developed it, David Platt and Anatole Rlyosov. It
is a sugar that looks for receptors only found on the outside
walls of cancer cells. “This particular carbohydrate is
attracted to the lectin Glactin 3, which is only found on cancer
cells,” says Spueglia.
In
preclinical trials on mice, 400 percent greater levels of the
cancer drug, 5FU, effectively targeted tumors in mice injected
with Davanat-1. Since the healthy cells were left alone, side
effects -- such as nausea, hair loss, and fatigue were minimal.
Human
trials of the drug started this past February at four sites:
Dartmouth-Hitchcock in Lebanon, N.H., the University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Ochsner Cancer Institute in New Orleans and
Florida Oncology Associates in Jacksonville, Fla. All of the
patients invited to participate are considered refractory
patients -- meaning this is their last hope. They are in
advanced stages of cancer and conventional treatments --
radiation, surgery and chemotherapy -- have failed them.
“If
the preclinical trial results are any indication, we may have a
lot of miracles in the works,” says Spueglia. “Of the mice
injected only with 5FU, 65 percent died. We had a 100-percent
survival rate for mice that received DAVANAT-1.”
“The
treatment sounds very promising,” says Dr. Bone. “I’m
looking forward to seeing the results of the human trials.”
Once tests on humans are complete, sometime next year, the
results will be reported to the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA). After reviewing the results, the FDA will decide whether
DAVANAT-1 should be added to the arsenal of cancer fighting
drugs. For more details about the study, visit the Pro
Pharmaceuticals web site. [Courtesy of ARA Content].
To
Learn More About Breast Cancer:

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