Genetic 'hotspots' flag up opportunities for more personalised bowel cancer treatment |
10th February, 2010 @ 11.27 am |
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Genetic 'hotspots' flag up opportunities for more personalised bowel cancer treatment The team at the University of Dundee carried out a genetic analysis on 106 bowel cancer tumour samples to search for the frequency of known faults in a key gene called K-Ras. This gene is the blueprint for an important protein which acts as an ‘on-off switch’ in cells to control growth. It is already known that in some bowel cancers the K-Ras gene is faulty, leaving the switch permanently ‘on’. A subset of bowel cancer patients who have a normally functioning K-Ras ‘switch’ might in some circumstances** benefit from new cancer drugs called cetuximab and panitumumab. But patients with faulty K-Ras will not benefit from these drugs and may even be harmed by them, making it especially important to be able to accurately test the K-Ras gene for faults. The identification of these additional genetic ‘hot-spots’ could flag up additional patients who would not benefit from these types of treatments. Study co-author, Professor Roland Wolf, director of the Biomedical Research Institute and the Cancer Research UK Molecular Pharmacology Unit at the University of Dundee, said: “Studies such as this clearly show us the importance of identifying faults in particular molecular pathways associated with drug response and tailoring drug therapy accordingly. “These findings may in the future be relevant for selected patients with advanced bowel cancer as doctors will be able to more precisely target these treatments to the patients who will benefit and avoid treating those who won’t.” Lead study author Dr Gillian Smith from the University of Dundee, said: “These results highlight additional gene faults which potentially could be tested for in bowel cancer patients to determine which people will respond best to which drugs. “The next stage is to develop effective tests to screen for these mutation ‘hotspots’ to help doctors to plan the most effective treatment strategies for bowel cancer patients - and this will encourage scientists to also focus their efforts on finding new treatments for patients with faulty K-Ras genes to give them more options.” Dr Lesley Walker, director of cancer information at Cancer Research UK, said: “This important study shows how the most fundamental science can have a direct impact on the treatment of patients in the clinic. There is increasing interest in the identification of molecular markers to flag up the forms of cancer which would respond to a particular treatment and these findings could help health professionals plan and deliver more personalised and effective treatment for people with bowel cancer.” |








