Chemotherapy is one of the main therapeutic modalities for cancer patients. Chemotherapeutic drugs destroy cancer cells in the body, but patients frequently face side effects since the drugs do not selectively target cancer cells and may also be toxic to healthy cells to varying extents. One example is the chemotherapeutic drug called doxorubicin (dox), which is frequently given to cancer patients with breast cancer and certain types of blood cancers.
However, up to one-third of patients receiving high-dose doxorubicin treatment experience heart damage, which in the long term can lead to heart failure. Like cancer cells, dox can enter normal heart cells where it damages the cell’s DNA and ultimately causes cell death. To increase dox’s specificity for cancer cells, researchers Arun Sharma, Xiaojiang Cui, and colleagues at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and scientists at Sunstate Biosciences Inc, USA, came up with a way of enveloping dox with a protein shell.
The new formulation called SPEDOX-6 increased the drug’s likelihood of being taken up by fast-dividing cells such as cancer cells while also reducing its toxicity to heart cells. Lab-based tests with human cancer cells and human stem cell-derived heart cells confirmed that SPEDOX-6, like dox, was highly toxic to cancer cells but much less toxic to normal human heart cells than conventional dox.
The same effect was seen with heart cells made from patients with an increased risk for dox-induced heart damage due to genetic mutations. This data confirms that SPEDOX-6 is less toxic to heart cells while preserving its anticancer activity. A clinical trial is currently being planned to test the safety and efficacy of SPEDOX-6 in cancer patients.
The World Cancer Declaration recognises that to make major reductions in premature deaths, innovative education and training opportunities for healthcare workers in all disciplines of cancer control need to improve significantly.
ecancer plays a critical part in improving access to education for medical professionals.
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