Scientists have discovered that
cancers are fueled by small populations of cancer stem cells. These cells are
resistant to current therapies and are thought to drive cancer relapse and
metastasis, which are the main cause of death in cancer patients. The exciting
findings published in August in the journals Nature and Science could lead to
revolutionary new strategies for cancer treatment.
Cancer is the second cause of death
in the US and Europe, and despite an increase in cancer survival in some
cancers due to prevention and early diagnosis, the survival rate for patients
with cancers in advanced stages has not changed significantly in the past
decades.
After a tumor is removed surgically
or by chemo and radiotherapy, it often grows back (relapse) and spreads to
other parts of the body (metastasis). Scientists have believed for many years
that a small population of cancerous stem cells is resistant to therapy and
responsible for tumor growth, including during relapse and metastasis- this is
called 'cancer stem cell hypothesis'.
During the past 15 years, several
research groups have described cancer stem cells in many types of cancer, and
transplantation experiments, in which cells from biopsies of cancer patients
are injected into mice, have shown that such cells could generate new tumors.
However, these studies did not provide direct evidence for the existence of
cancer stem cells. "This manipulation of tumors could potentially bring
pitfalls and stronger evidence from unperturbed tumors were needed," said Gregory Driessens, a molecular biologist from the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Belgium.
Now researchers from three
independent groups were able to 'see' cancer stem cells labeled with
fluorescent markers promoting tumor growth in the brain, skin and digestive
system of mice. "Our finding confirms that cancer stem cells really exist
as it was suggested but not formally proven so far by grafting
experiments," said Driessens, who led the study that identified
cancer stem cells in skin.
Cancer stem cells consist of only
about 1-3% of all cells in a tumor. So why is their discovery so important?
Cancer stem cells could be the source of the most aggressive cancers with a
poor prognostic. "This the first time researchers have traced the cell of
origin within different tumors. Because cancers are proving to be so complex,
we don't yet know how relevant this research in mice is to humans, but it gives
us new insights into how cancers might develop and why they can sometimes grow
back after therapy." explains Michaela Frye, a Cancer Research UK
scientist based at the University of Cambridge (UK).
"Anticancer treatments should
not only be evaluated on their efficacy on the bulk tumor but also specifically
for the effect on cancer stem cells, since these cells could be more resistant
to chemo and radiotherapies," adds Driessens. These discoveries
therefore open the way for the development of new therapies targeting cancer
stem cells, which could revolutionize the treatment of cancer.
This article was published in The Munich Eye on the 14th of September 2012. You can find it here.
Sources:
, , , & Nature
et al. (2012) Nature http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11287
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