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November 15, 2001 - WASHINGTON A microscopic cancer
"smart bomb" powered by a single radioactive atom is
able to find and kill tumor cells in laboratory experiments.
Researchers hope to test the technique on human patients next
year.
Dr. David A. Scheinberg of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York said tests of the technique in mice show that
it selectively kills cancer cells and substantially prolongs
the life of lab animals with tumors.
"You could inject several million of these molecules
and they would circulate around, find their targets cells, be
taken inside and then kill the cells," said Scheinberg.
"These are extraordinarily potent drugs."
Scheinberg said he hopes to start human clinical trials with
the technique next year. He said before the technique could become
a routine therapy for cancer patients, researchers need to find
out if the low-level radiation will cause unacceptable levels
of damage to normal, noncancerous cells.
"We simply can't predict all of that," he said.
A report on the research appears Friday in the journal Science.
Dr. Michael G. Rosenblum, a researcher at M.D. Anderson Cancer
Center in Houston, said the Scheinberg study "represents
an important advance" in treating cancer using antibodies
to target specific cancer cells.
"This doesn't guarantee that it would work in [humans],
but it should be taken to the clinic (tested in humans),"
said Rosenblum, who is conducting similar studies.
In their study, Scheinberg and his associates created a cancer
smart bomb by putting a single atom of actinium-225, a radioactive
isotope, inside a microscopic cage made by Dow Chemical Co. in
Freeport, Texas.
The isotope is a byproduct of nuclear power plants and nuclear
weapons manufacturing. It radiates a low level dose of alpha
particles. As it decays, actinium-225 produces three daughter
atoms, each of which also gives out alpha particles.
Scheinberg said the cage, made of carbon and nitrogen, is
shaped like a ring with the actinium-225 atom inside. They are
held together in the same way that magnets can stick together
the isotope has a positive charge and the molecular cage
has a negative charge.
"The ring holds the atom in the center like a hula hoop
containing a basketball," said Scheinberg.
Attached to the cage and atom is an antibody, a protein that
will lock onto a corresponding protein on the surface of a cell.
Scheinberg calls the complex a "nanogenerator" because
it is small, but still gives off atomic radiation.
When the nanogenerator is injected into the body, it travels
through the blood stream until the antibody locks onto a cell
and the entire complex moves inside the cell.
Once inside, the alpha particles radiated from the actinium-225
will kill the cell. The additional alpha particles from the daughter
atoms can be deadly to nearby cells.
"Each of the daughters can release an alpha particle
that can kill a cell," said Scheinberg. "So you get
four punches for the same delivery."
Tests exposing the caged atom to laboratory cultures showed
that it could kill a variety of cancers, including cells of leukemia,
lymphoma, breast, ovarian and prostate cancer.
The researchers also tested the technique in mice that had
been injected with human cancer cells. They compared the lifetime
of mice treated with the caged atom with that of a control group
that was not treated with nanogenerator injections.
Mice that did not receive the nanogenerator therapy lived
an average of 43 days before dying of cancer. The mice treated
with the nanogenerator lived up to 300 days, with those receiving
the highest radiation dose living the longest.
The researchers killed the surviving mice after 300 days and
looked for evidence of tumors in their bodies, but found none.
Of particular concern, Scheinberg said, is the effect the
nanogenerator might have on normal tissue.
"We depend on the antibody to get it to the tumor, but
that process is not 100 percent efficient so there is likely
to be some bystander damage (killing of normal cells),"
said Scheinberg. "We don't know what that level will be
until we test it in patients."
The actinium-225 eventually becomes harmless and remains in
the body, he said. [Source:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,38873,00.html ] |