Dr. Weeks’ Comment: The art of medicine requires applying new knowledge gleaned from scientifically valid experiments in a safe but also timely manner at the bedside. If your doctor is not reading cutting edge science and is simply waiting for new knowledge to become endorsed by “experts” as the new the standard of care, you will not live long enough to benefit from the breakthroughs. But if the application of new knowledge is applied prematurely and in an incorrect manner, you also can suffer. So, what do you need? You need three things: 1) you need a smart and a cautious doctor who understands that the first rule of medicine is to do no harm (“primum non nocere”) 2) you need a health care culture to acknowledges that science is not a consensus business it is a rational process for asserting hypotheses and then testing them in a moral and ethical manner (fully informed consent attained and freely given) and 3) you need an economic system which rewards superior doctors for delivering superior results. What I have described is not the current state of affairs in the American medical system. It is offered by precious few doctors practicing “Corrective Cancer Care” but these innovators are attacked by corporate medicine. Meanwhile, the persistent ignoring of cancer STEM cells by oncologist is just one criminally blatant manifestation of this failure.
Question: if you or a loved one has cancer, have you been told by your oncologist theses 5 facts?
1) cancer STEM cells are the most lethal part of your cancer
2) cancer STEM cells are responsible for metastasis (spreading) of your primary tumor
3) cancer STEM cells are resistant to chemotherapy and radiation
4) cancer STEM cells are made worse (more virulent and more numerous) by chemotherapy and radiation
5) chemotherapy has a 2.3% benefit for survival over 5 years in adults?
The answer is “NO” because the industry has not yet figured out how to make money targeting cancer STEM cells so they don’t mention them to trusting patients despite research like this concluding: “…The researchers say their findings, reported in the journal Cancer Cell, offer conclusive evidence for the existence of cancer stem cells…”
You’d think your doctor would be interested in addressing “…at the root of any cancer there is a small subset of cancer cells that are solely responsible for driving the growth and evolution of a patient’s cancer…”
Genetic tracking identifies cancer stem cells in human patients
The international research team, led by scientists at the University of Oxford and the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, studied a group of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes — a malignant blood condition which frequently develops into acute myeloid leukaemia.
The researchers say their findings, reported in the journal Cancer Cell, offer conclusive evidence for the existence of cancer stem cells.
The concept of cancer stem cells has been a compelling but controversial idea for many years. It suggests that at the root of any cancer there is a small subset of cancer cells that are solely responsible for driving the growth and evolution of a patient’s cancer. These cancer stem cells replenish themselves and produce the other types of cancer cells, as normal stem cells produce other normal tissues.
The concept is important, because it suggests that only by developing treatments that get rid of the cancer stem cells will you be able to eradicate the cancer. Likewise, if you could selectively eliminate these cancer stem cells, the other remaining cancer cells would not be able to sustain the cancer.
‘It’s like having dandelions in your lawn. You can pull out as many as you want, but if you don’t get the roots they’ll come back,’ explains first author Dr Petter Woll of the MRC Weatherall Institute for Molecular Medicine at the University of Oxford.
The researchers, led by Professor Sten Eirik W Jacobsen at the MRC Molecular Haematology Unit and the Weatherall Institute for Molecular Medicine at the University of Oxford, investigated malignant cells in the bone marrow of patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and followed them over time.
Using genetic tools to establish in which cells cancer-driving mutations originated and then propagated into other cancer cells, they demonstrated that a distinct and rare subset of MDS cells showed all the hallmarks of cancer stem cells, and that no other malignant MDS cells were able to propagate the tumour.
The MDS stem cells were rare, sat at the top of a hierarchy of MDS cells, could sustain themselves, replenish the other MDS cells, and were the origin of all stable DNA changes and mutations that drove the progression of the disease.
‘This is conclusive evidence for the existence of cancer stem cells in myelodysplastic syndromes,’ says Dr Woll. ‘We have identified a subset of cancer cells, shown that these rare cells are invariably the cells in which the cancer originates, and also are the only cancer-propagating cells in the patients. It is a vitally important step because it suggests that if you want to cure patients, you would need to target and remove these cells at the root of the cancer — but that would be sufficient, that would do it.’
The existence of cancer stem cells has already been reported in a number of human cancers, explains Professor Jacobsen, but previous findings have remained controversial since the lab tests used to establish the identity of cancer stem cells have been shown to be unreliable and, in any case, do not reflect the “real situation” in an intact tumour in a patient.
‘In our studies we avoided the problem of unreliable lab tests by tracking the origin and development of cancer-driving mutations in MDS patients,’ says Professor Jacobsen, who also holds a guest professorship at the Karolinska Institutet.
Dr Woll adds: ‘We can’t offer patients today new treatments with this knowledge. What it does is give us a target for development of more efficient and cancer stem cell specific therapies to eliminate the cancer.
‘We need to understand more about what makes these cancer stem cells unique, what makes them different to all the other cancer cells. If we can find biological pathways that are specifically dysregulated in cancer stem cells, we might be able to target them with new drugs.’
Dr Woll cautions: ‘It is important to emphasize that our studies only investigated cancer stem cells in MDS, and that the identity, number and function of stem cells in other cancers are likely to differ from that of MDS.’
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by University of Oxford. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- Petter S. Woll, Una Kjällquist, Onima Chowdhury, Helen Doolittle, David C. Wedge, Supat Thongjuea, Rikard Erlandsson, Mtakai Ngara, Kristina Anderson, Qiaolin Deng, Adam J. Mead, Laura Stenson, Alice Giustacchini, Sara Duarte, Eleni Giannoulatou, Stephen Taylor, Mohsen Karimi, Christian Scharenberg, Teresa Mortera-Blanco, Iain C. Macaulay, Sally-Ann Clark, Ingunn Dybedal, Dag Josefsen, Pierre Fenaux, Peter Hokland, Mette S. Holm, Mario Cazzola, Luca Malcovati, Sudhir Tauro, David Bowen, Jacqueline Boultwood, Andrea Pellagatti, John E. Pimanda, Ashwin Unnikrishnan, Paresh Vyas, Gudrun Göhring, Brigitte Schlegelberger, Magnus Tobiasson, Gunnar Kvalheim, Stefan N. Constantinescu, Claus Nerlov, Lars Nilsson, Peter J. Campbell, Rickard Sandberg, Elli Papaemmanuil, Eva Hellström-Lindberg, Sten Linnarsson, Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen.Myelodysplastic Syndromes Are Propagated by Rare and Distinct Human Cancer Stem Cells In Vivo. Cancer Cell, 2014; DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2014.03.036