Genes could ‘revolutionise’ prostate cancer treatment

A NEW way of fighting prostate cancer by targeting normal cells inside tumours could lead to a revolution in treatment, it has been claimed.

Scientists switched on key genes inside non-cancerous cells within tumours. In mice, the therapy procedure caused tumours to shrink by 75 per cent.

Like other solid cancers, prostate tumours are a mixture of malignant and normal cells. But recent work suggests “healthy” cells in tumours can play an important role in stimulating cancer growth and spread.

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Lead scientist Dr Axel Thomson, from the Queen’s Medical Research Institute in Edinburgh, said: “This extremely exciting development has the potential to form the basis of a revolution in prostate cancer treatments.”

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