Att: To all myeloma sufferers....
Kevin asked for me to post article I read..... We are concerned about this article and I will be certainly asking the doc about it..
NewsRx.com
January 24, 2008
Scientists
at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center say they have evidence that
cancer stem cells for multiple myeloma share many properties with
normal stem cells and have multiple ways of resisting chemotherapy and
other treatments.
A report on the evidence, published in the Jan. 1 issue of
the journal Cancer Research, may explain why the disease is so
persistent, the Johns Hopkins scientists say, and pave the way for
treatments that overcome the cells drug resistance. Multiple myeloma
affects bone marrow and bone tissue.
"Cancer stem cells that have distinct biology and drug
sensitivity as compared with the bulk of a cancer may explain why
multiple myeloma, like many other cancers, so often relapses even after
chemotherapy puts patients into remission," says Richard J. Jones,
M.D., professor and director of bone marrow transplant at Hopkins
Kimmel Cancer Center and one of the scientists who authored the new
report.
The existence of cancer stem cells - a topic of some
controversy in cancer biology - is seen by some scientists as a useful
explanation for the long history of difficulty in overcoming some
cancers persistence.
The Hopkins investigators previously had uncovered a rare
stem cell in myeloma, accounting for less than one percent of all the
cancer s cells. Working with cell samples from myeloma patients, the
team found that this stem cell originates from immune system B-cells
and is capable of giving rise to the malignant bone marrow cells
characteristic of the disease.
In the current study, the scientists isolated stem cells from
the blood of four patients with multiple myeloma and transplanted them
into mice. All of the animals developed hind-limb paralysis and showed
signs of cancer in the bone marrow. By contrast, plasma cells that were
transplanted from multiple myeloma patients to mice did not engraft.
The Hopkins scientists say that recreating the disease in mice provides
more evidence that these cells act as cancer stem cells.
The Johns Hopkins scientists also compared the response of
these special stem cells with the bulk of multiple myeloma plasma
cells, to four different chemotherapy medications commonly used to
treat patients with the disease: dexamethasone, lenadilomide,
bortezomib and 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide. While all four agents
significantly inhibited the growth of the plasma cells, none inhibited
the stem cells.
To their surprise, the research team noted that the multiple
myeloma stem cells resemble other types of adult stem cells and exhibit
similar properties that may make them resistant to chemotherapy. They
found that the stem cells contain high levels of enzymes that
neutralize toxins, like cancer drugs, and expel them through miniature
pumps on their cell surface. The investigators believe that these
drug-fighting enzymes and pumps - also plentiful in normal stem cells -
may help cancer stem cells resist treatment.
"Nature made normal stem cells very hearty for a reason,
namely to survive and help repair damaged tissues and organs after
injury or illness," says William Matsui, M.D., an assistant professor
of oncology at Hopkins and the study s lead investigator. "To us, it
makes sense that the same processes that protect normal stem cells also
exist in cancer stem cells to make them resistant to chemotherapy. We
need to develop new ways to target the specific biology of cancer stem
cells to prevent the continued production of mature tumor cells and
disease relapse."
"Standard cancer therapy is like mowing the weed - it gets
rid of the disease transiently but the dandelion always grows back. We
need to get rid of the root to cure disease, and therefore need a
different type of therapy - mowing won t work," says Jones.
Matsui says the work also may make it possible to track the
rare myeloma stem cells as a marker of how well a patient is doing
during treatment.
Multiple myeloma is the second most common blood cancer and
strikes more than 14,000 Americans each year. Close to 11,000 will die
from the disease.
Copyright 2008, Stem Cell Week via NewsRx.com