Prostate cancer: New therapy could reverse drug resistance

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Scientists are working on new therapies for drug-resistant cancers. VICTOR TORRES/Stocksy
  • Some forms of prostate cancer are more challenging to treat and may not respond to conventional treatments.
  • Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer is a type of advanced prostate cancer that no longer responds to normal treatments and has spread to other parts of the body.
  • Researchers from the Institute of Cancer Research, London, have discovered this resistance may be reversed in some people by stopping white blood cells from being “hijacked” and pulled into tumors.

Prostate cancer affects millions of men each year. It is the second most common cancer in the world in men and the fourth most commonly occurring cancer overall. It is estimated that in 2020 alone, there were 1.41 million new cases of prostate cancer around the world.

Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer is a type of advanced prostate cancer that no longer responds to normal treatments and has spread to other parts of the body.

The estimated survival rate for a man diagnosed with castration-resistant prostate cancer is between nine months to 3 years.

Now, researchers from the Institute of Cancer Research, London, have discovered the treatment resistance of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer can be reversed in some people by stopping white blood cells from being “hijacked” and pulled into tumors.

This study was recently published in the journal Nature.

During the study, scientists used a combination of an experimental drug called AZD5069 and a hormone therapy commonly used to treat prostate cancer called enzalutamide to stop myeloid cells from being pulled into tumors.

“This drug works by blocking myeloid cells being attracted into the tumor. If these cells cannot get into the tumor, they cannot carry out their usual tumor-promoting activities,” Prof. De Bono said.

Of the 21 study participants with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, researchers reported five of them responded to the treatment by either their tumor shrinking in size by over 30%, a decrease in circulating levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), or a drop in circulating tumor cell blood levels.

The scientists stated that participants who received the treatment also experienced a drop in myeloid cells, and biopsies after treatment also revealed fewer myeloid cells within their tumors.

“It was tremendously exciting to see five study participants show a response to the treatment. It proves for the first time that targeting myeloid cells rather than the cancer cells themselves can benefit patients. Developing new drugs can take many years, but we plan to further work on this in clinical trials, develop better drugs, and hopefully take this forward as a treatment strategy.”
— Prof. Johann De Bono

And might this process of targeting myeloid white blood cells be used to treat other types of cancer?

“We know myeloid cells have a role in the promotion of other types of cancer, so we think the impact of this research could be broad, across multiple cancer types,” Prof. De Bono said.

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