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Study looks at using the Immune System to
reduce Prostate Cancer Risk
Newswise — Immune therapies have been
explored as a way to treat cancer after it
develops. But a new study from the
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer
Center suggests that genetic risk of
prostate cancer can be reduced by rescuing
critical immune system cells.
The study was done in mice and would need
further validation and extensive testing in
the lab before being available for humans.
But the results are promising for people
with a strong family history of cancer or
known cancer genes.
Typically, vaccines are based on specific
antigens and trigger immunity for a specific
pathogen.
This is more challenging for cancer as the
best lymphocytes that generate immunity to
cancer are eliminated during development.
In
this new study, researchers sought to rescue
these key lymphocytes – called high affinity
cancer-reactive T cells – during their
development.
The study appears online this week in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
The researchers first showed that T cells
involved in prostate cancer are deleted
because of a gene called lymphotoxin alpha.
When the mice lacked lymphotoxin, these T
cells came back. These mice become more
resistant to prostate cancer.
This result suggests that lymphotoxin can be
a good target for immune prevention.
Next, the researchers injected a protein
targeting lymphotoxin into
cancer-susceptible mice.
Without treatment, all of these mice will
develop prostate cancer, and typically by
age 6 months half of them will have
metastatic cancer that has spread to distant
organs.
Although the treated mice still developed
tumors, none developed metastases after 30
weeks.
“It appears that the rescued T cells delay
tumor formation. It may not be that this
approach can prevent cancer altogether, but
it can delay the process and slow the
aggressive growth and spread of cancer,”
says study author Pan Zheng, M.D., Ph.D.,
associate professor of surgery and pathology
at the U-M Medical School.
While this study looked specifically at mice
with prostate cancer, the approach has
potential for other types of cancer.
“There is a certain population with a high
likelihood of getting cancer, and we need
better strategies to minimize their risk.
This approach may be translated into
clinical care for those patients,” Zheng
says.
Prostate cancer statistics: 192,280
Americans will be diagnosed with prostate
cancer this year and 27,360 will die from
the disease, according to the American
Cancer Society
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