Originally published April 8 2005
Key to cancer fight may lie in "educating" immune cells, scientists say
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
Scientists in the front lines of the war against cancer say defeating the disease probably means a little education – of immune cells, that is. In a recent experiment, some Johns Hopkins scientists tested some immune cells that are known to attack a cancer of the bone marrow. The "smartest" cells – in other words, those that live near in the bone marrow near the cancer – were 90 percent more effective than those that lived in other parts of the body, the researchers say.
The experts say, then, that developing an effective cancer treatment is likely a matter of teaching the most effective cancer fighting cells where to live to do their best work.
- In efforts to educate the body to fight off cancer, researchers have found that some immune cells are "smarter" than others.
- Working with collections of human cells, Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center scientists tested kill-rates of two kinds of T-cells "primed" to home in on myeloma, a cancer of the bone marrow.
- "It is very difficult to design cancer therapies that get the body's immune system to recognize and kill cancer cells that the system has ignored for a long time," says Ivan Borrello, M.D., assistant professor of oncology and director of the research, which is published in the March 1 issue of Cancer Research.
- "Now, we have evidence that 'educating' T-cells in the bone marrow may be the most effective way to get an anti-tumor response."
- In the Hopkins study of both kinds of T-cells, those from the blood and bone marrow, scientists mixed them with magnetic beads coated with tumor antibodies, a sort of "artificial intelligence" that activated and expanded the T-cells' cancer-killing mode.
- Activated bone marrow T-cells stopped the growth of 86 percent of myeloma stem cell colonies compared to 47 percent for activated t-cells taken from circulating blood.
- The researchers' next step is to determine whether the cells' ability to limit cancer growth in culture dishes ultimately may do the same in patients.
- Kimmel Cancer Center researchers are planning studies in a small number of myeloma patients to test the activated marrow T-cells alone and in combination with a myeloma vaccine.
- "While T-cells from circulating blood traditionally are used in immunotherapy strategies because they are easy to obtain and grow, they often don't recognize the tumor," says Borrello.
- These would then be given intravenously back to patients.
- However, according to Borrello, they may find that an additional cancer vaccine may increase the overall anti-tumor effect of the marrow T-cells.
- Evidence from other research groups indicates that breast cancer patients have T-cells in their bone marrow that are specific to their tumor.
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