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Old 09-12-2011, 08:05 AM   #1
Lani
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Thumbs up promising drug derived from flower extract tied 2 Trojanhorse specific 4 cancercells

apparently cures several types of cancer (but not yet in people)
similar drug already used for gout, but more toxic.

from the BBC

12 September 2011 Last updated at 05:19 ET
British flowers are the source of a new cancer drug
By Leila Battison
Science reporter

Extracts from the Autumn crocus are already used to treat gout


The search for more effective cancer treatments may soon harness the healing power of the Autumn crocus.

Researchers are poised to start clinical trials with a new "smart bomb" treatment, derived from the flower, targeted specifically at tumours.

The treatment, called colchicine, was able to slow the growth of and even completely "kill" a range of different cancers, in experiments with mice.

The research was highlighted at the British Science Festival in Bradford.

The team behind it, from the Institute for Cancer Therapeutics (ICT) at the University of Bradford, has published the work in the journal Cancer Research.

The native British Autumn crocus, otherwise known as "meadow saffron" or "naked lady", is recorded in early herbal guides as a treatment for inflammation.

This is because it contains the potent chemical colchicine, which is known to have medicinal properties, including anti-cancer effects.

But colchicine is toxic to other tissues in the body, as well as cancer, so until now its use has been limited.

The researchers at ICT have now altered the colchicine molecule so it is inactive in the body until it reaches the tumour.

Once there, the chemical becomes active and breaks up the blood vessels supplying the tumour, effectively starving it.

This effect is made possible because of enzymes that all tumours produce, whose usual function is to break down the normal cells nearby, allowing the tumour to spread.

The modified colchicine molecule has a protein attached to it that makes it harmless. But the tumour enzyme specifically targets the protein and removes it.

The colchicine is then activated, and the process of breaking down blood vessels and starving the cancerous cells begins.

Optimistic but cautious
One of the things that may make this drug so effective, Professor Patterson said, is that it will be "only active in the tumour, and not cause damage to normal tissue".

Because the enzyme necessary to activate the toxic colchicine is produced only by solid tumours, it may be possible to treat cancers effectively with virtually no side effects to the rest of the body.


The "smart bombs" do not begin to act until they reach tumour tissue
Moreover, as the drug will be activated wherever the enzyme is produced, the delivery mechanism should allow treatment of particularly problematic cases of metastasis, where the cancer spreads from its initial site.

Pre-clinical tests in mice have shown startlingly successful results.

"What we're looking for is a delay in the growth of the tumour," said Professor Patterson.

"But sometimes the treatment is so effective that in half of the studies, the mice appeared to be cured of their cancer. All mice responded to the treatment."

Just one dose of the colchicine produced this remarkable effect. But if it passes clinical tests, the researchers believe it will be used alongside existing cancer treatments, as part of the complex process of tackling the disease.

The researchers hope that the treatment will enter the initial stage of clinical testing at St James's Hospital in Leeds within the next 18 months.

Professor Patterson said that he was "very optimistic about the opportunities of the treatment, but still cautious because everything done to date has been in the laboratory".

Paul Workman, head of cancer therapeutics at the Institute of Cancer Research, called the work an "interesting new approach".

"The project is still at quite an early stage but the results so far look promising in the laboratory models that have been studied," he said.

"If confirmed in more extensive laboratory studies, drugs based on this approach could be very useful as part of combination treatments for various cancers."
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Old 09-12-2011, 11:24 AM   #2
Rich66
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Re: promising drug derived from flower extract tied 2 Trojanhorse specific 4 cancerce

Although more "toxic" than unwrapping at the tumor via enzymes, systemic Colchicine is a common gout medication available in pill form. My father took it for years.

Another version of the current news article:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/20...r-side-effects

Research investigating Colchicine to reduce negative cancer related effects of surgery: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/34279

Less recent research from 1950
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2038695/
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Old 09-12-2011, 12:09 PM   #3
Ellie F
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Re: promising drug derived from flower extract tied 2 Trojanhorse specific 4 cancerce

Hey folks
Have lots and lots of crocus in my garden! I will now give them much more respect. This study has been featured on UK television recently including a suggestion that the crocus may contain chemicals to help treat alzheimers disease as well as cancer!

Ellie
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