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New ‘Targeted’ Treatments Improve Colon Cancer Survival Rates

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People diagnosed with advanced colorectal cancer that has spread to distant organs, such as White House spokesman Tony Snow, are much more likely to survive today than even just a few years ago, due to the recent and continued emergence of improved therapies, say cancer experts.

“Anyone who looks at this as a death sentence is wrong,” said Dr. Allyson Ocean, a gastrointestinal oncologist at Weill Cornell Medical College, quoted in a CBS News report, in reference to Snow’s diagnosis just a few days ago of Stage IV (advanced) colon cancer.The reason that statement can be made today — when it would not have been true even five years ago — is due mainly to the availability now of newer treatments known as “targeted” therapies that boost main therapies by hitting specific molecular targets driving the origin and growth of tumors, say cancer experts.Snow has the option of adding the targeted therapy bevacuzimab (trade name Avastin) to one of the chemotherapy regimens most often used in Stage IV colon cancer. Doing so is more effective than using the chemotherapy alone, according to the American Cancer Society (ACS).Such adjunctive treatments are one reason treatment of advanced colon cancer today can be curative, notes the ACS website.Some New Targeted Compounds Are NaturalNot all the new targeted compounds are pharmaceutical products, or even drugs per se.A naturally-occurring extract of fermented wheat germ (FWGE), has been shown to substantially boost the efficacy of conventional therapies against a wide range of cancers, while lessening side effects of those drugs.Researchers at UCLA found FWGE targets the transketolase (TK) pathway, a biochemical pathway that cancer cells — but not normal cells — preferentially use to rapidly make DNA for the fast cell division that makes cancer such a threat. It leaves normal cells unaffected.Other studies found eight additional molecular targets the compound addresses, preventing the development of cancerous and precancerous lesions, reducing risk of cancer spread, stimulating cancer cell suicide and improving the anticancer effects of chemotherapy drugs.(Source : Weill Cornell Medical College : April 2007.)


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Dates

Posted On: 22 April, 2007
Modified On: 16 January, 2014

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