>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / HEALTH / STORY
Cancer drug helps transplants
Sat, Dec 27, 2008
AFP

CHICAGO - A DRUG used to treat cancer has proven effective at stopping the body from rejecting a transplanted organ when other treatments failed, a study to be published on Saturday found.

US researchers administered the drug, bortezomib, to six patients whose immune systems were attacking transplanted kidneys and who did not respond to traditional anti-rejection treatments.

In each case, the drug promptly reversed the rejection, improved organ function, provided prolonged reductions in antibody levels and suppressed recurrent rejection for at least five months.

'This has significant implications for transplantation and auto immune disease,' said study co-author Steve Woodle, chief of transplant surgery at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio.

Dr Woodle's team is currently conducting four clinical trials to expand upon these preliminary findings.

The drug's side effects proved to be both predictable and manageable and toxicity levels were much less than those associated with other anti-cancer agents, the study found.

'We are pleased to see its toxicities are similar in transplant recipients suffering from treatment-resistant mixed organ rejection,' said study co-author Jason Everly, an oncology pharmacist at the University of Cincinnati.

'We hope it will be a viable therapeutic treatment option in this patient group.'

Previous studies had found that B-cells play a large role in organ rejection by making immune proteins that attack transplants.

The drug targets these antibody-producing plasma cells and had been shown to suppress transplant rejection in the laboratory before Dr Woodle and his team tested it on patients.

The study was published in the journal Transplantation. -- AFP

 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  Cancer drug helps transplants
   
 
  Watch those contact lenses
   
 
  Whole grains may lessen heart failure risk
   
 
  Poor blood flow to brain may provoke Alzheimer's: study
   
 
  Heart health for the holidays
   
 
  Large prostates removed with single-keyhole surgery
   
 
  Rare sleep disorder may be a harbinger of dementia
   
 
  Headaches: When pills offer no relief
   
 
  Older people mixing drugs
   
 
  HIV couples who can't bear to part
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg