Brain Tumors: Primary - Other Treatments
From DrKoop's partner site on breast cancer, MyBreastCancerNetwork.com
Other TreatmentsResearchers are testing several drugs that target specific mechanisms associated with brain cancer. Combinations of some of these drugs, with or without standard chemotherapy and radiotherapy, may prove to be more effective than the use of any one treatment. It should be noted that none of these drugs at this time are producing cures, although some are improving survival. ImmunotherapyImmunotherapy aims at using modalities that boost the patient's own immune system's ability to seek out and destroy cancerous cells. Radioimmunotherapy with Monoclonal Antibodies. Radioimmunotherapy is showing special promise as a treatment approach to brain tumors. It typically uses monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), genetically engineered drugs designed to work against a specific target. MAbs are bound with radioactive substances and delivered directly into the brain and sometimes into the tumor. The MAbs are specifically designed to lock with the surface of certain cells in the tumor. Once they do so, the radioactive substances destroy the cell. The approach is essentially mini-radiation therapy without the damage or severe side effects of standard radiation treatments. Numerous different radioimmunotherapies are being investigated, and trials of some are reporting improved survival rates in high-grade gliomas. Some experts believe this approach could prove to be the most effective therapy against these cancers. advertisement
Interleukins. Interleukins are natural proteins created by the immune system. Certain tumor cells carry receptors for specific interleukins, which are being investigated for a possible therapeutic role. For example, some drugs combine an interleukin with a drug that is toxic to cancer cells. The interleukin locks onto the receptor on the cancer cell, and the toxic chemical enters the tumor with the intent to kill it. Some interleukins are also being investigated alone for their own tumor-cell killing properties. Tumor Vaccines. Tumor vaccines are also being created, in which tumor cells are removed from the patient and inactivated. When the tumor cells are transferred back to the patient, they are harmless but can elicit a powerful immunologic response against the tumor. For example, a vaccine that combines tumor proteins with the patient's nerve cells is being tested in astrocytomas.
| ||
What's HOTGet our free newsletterPR Newswire |
|