New Research to combat Ovarian Cancer

A1pena
A1pena Member Posts: 92
edited March 2014 in Ovarian Cancer #1
Hi There,

Been doing a ton of research for my mom regarding uterine cancer (serous carcinoma to be exact) and came across this new study for Ovarian cancer. Thought you may like to see it!

Kind Regards,

Amanda



Disarming Specialized Stem Cells Might Combat Deadly Ovarian Cancer
ScienceDaily (Jan. 29, 2010)

— Eliminating cancer stem cells (CSCs) within a tumor could hold the key to successful treatments for ovarian cancer, which has been notoriously difficult to detect and treat, according to new findings published this week in the journal Oncogene by Yale School of Medicine researchers.

"We found that stopping the expression of two genes -- Lin28 and Oct4 -- reduces ovarian cancer cell growth and survival," said Yingqun Huang, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences at Yale School of Medicine.

Ovarian cancer has been challenging to treat because it tends to recur frequently and develop resistance to treatment. The poor outcome for women with ovarian cancer has been associated with subtle and nonspecific symptoms -- earning it the moniker the "disease that whispers."

"This recurrence and drug resistance may be due to the presence of CSCs within the tumors that have the capacity to reproduce and to differentiate into non-CSC tumor cells that repopulate the tumor mass," said Huang, who is a member of Yale Stem Cell Center and Yale Cancer Center. "Eliminating these CSCs may be key to successful treatments."

While in the process of studying the functions of stem cell proteins in human embryonic stem cells, Huang and her colleagues unexpectedly discovered that a sub-population of ovarian cancer cells express stem cell proteins Lin28 and Oct4. They also found that the two proteins appear to act together in ovarian cancer tissue cells to produce more advanced tumors. Inhibiting their combined expression led to a significant decrease in the growth and survival of cancer cells. A larger-scale ovarian cancer study is currently underway to confirm the significance of the findings.

"We hope we will soon be able to apply this new information to improve outcomes, perhaps by developing better diagnostic markers and treatment strategies that may be useful in customizing treatment for ovarian cancer patients," said Huang.

The study was supported by Connecticut Innovations, the Fannie E. Rippel Foundation and the National Cancer Institute.

Other Yale authors on the study included Nita Maihle and Shuping Peng.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100127152502.htm

Comments

  • worriedaboutmom
    worriedaboutmom Member Posts: 31
    wow
    that is very interesting info! thanks for sharing it because it gives me hope that soon there will be a treatment that will end this horrible disease!!
    thanks
    becky
  • nancy591
    nancy591 Member Posts: 1,027 Member

    wow
    that is very interesting info! thanks for sharing it because it gives me hope that soon there will be a treatment that will end this horrible disease!!
    thanks
    becky

    long time
    But sometimes science takes a very long time! My clock is ticking! Maybe a clinical trial soon.