ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Health

Scientists aim to make cancer immunotherapy safer and more effective

Louisiana [US], May 9 (ANI): According to new research, scientists are working to improve immune checkpoint inhibitors to better target tumours and reduce their impact on healthy tissues.

ANI May 09, 2022 23:47 IST googleads

Representative image

Louisiana [US], May 9 (ANI): According to new research, scientists are working to improve immune checkpoint inhibitors to better target tumours and reduce their impact on healthy tissues.
The findings of the research were published in the journal 'Cancer Cell' by Johnson, the lead author of the study with Adi Diab, MD and Yared Hailemichael, PhD.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have revolutionized the treatment of many cancers by using our body's immune system to kill cancer. These treatments sometimes can cause our immune system to fight healthy tissue instead, resulting in side effects.
A frequent adverse effect of immune checkpoint inhibitors is colitis or inflammation in the colon. When studying patients receiving these immune checkpoint inhibitors, researchers at MD Anderson and Ochsner Health have uncovered that a particular cytokine, or protein that activates certain immune cells, is expressed at higher levels in colitis tissue than in cancer tissue shrinking from these treatments.
They also showed that by blocking this cytokine in lab models, the immune system's ability to fight cancer improves as side effects lessen.
Daniel Johnson, MD, a medical oncologist at Ochsner Health, is the lead author of the study that identifies interleukin-6 (IL-6) as a potential target in refining immunotherapies.
"This study shows that blocking IL-6 could de-couple autoimmunity from antitumor immunity," said Johnson, who began the research during a fellowship at MD Anderson and has continued it at Ochsner.
"By targeting this particular cytokine in patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors to treat cancer, we could potentially improve immune responses in cancer while lowering the risk of inflammation in healthy tissue." (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Health

The more you fear aging, the faster your body may age

The more you fear aging, the faster your body may age

Worrying about getting older especially fearing future health problems may actually speed up aging at the cellular level, according to new research from NYU.

Read More
Health

Scientists find clue to human brain evolution in finger length

Scientists find clue to human brain evolution in finger length

Human evolution has long been tied to growing brain size, and new research suggests prenatal hormones may have played a surprising role. By studying the relative lengths of the index and ring fingers, a marker of prenatal exposure to oestrogen and testosterone, researchers found that higher prenatal oestrogen exposure was associated with larger head size in newborn boys.

Read More
Health

MRI scans show exercise can make the brain look younger

MRI scans show exercise can make the brain look younger

New research suggests that consistent aerobic exercise can help keep your brain biologically younger. Adults who exercised regularly for a year showed brains that appeared nearly a year younger than those who didn't change their habits.

Read More
Health

Scientists solve a major roadblock in cancer cell therapy: Study 

Scientists solve a major roadblock in cancer cell therapy: Study 

Researchers have found a reliable way to grow helper T cells from stem cells, solving a major challenge in immune-based cancer therapy. Helper T cells act as the immune system's coordinators, helping other immune cells fight longer and harder.

Read More
Health

Injection turns sleeping tumour immune cells into cancer fighters

Injection turns sleeping tumour immune cells into cancer fighters

The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) researchers have developed a way to reprogram immune cells already inside tumours into cancer-killing machines.

Read More
Health

High-fat diets give liver cancer a dangerous head start: Study

High-fat diets give liver cancer a dangerous head start: Study

A high-fat diet does more than overload the liver with fat. New research from MIT shows that prolonged exposure to fatty foods can push liver cells into a survival mode that quietly raises the risk of cancer.

Read More
Health

Researchers have decoded rare cancer fighting plant compound

Researchers have decoded rare cancer fighting plant compound

UBC Okanagan researchers have uncovered how plants create mitraphylline, a rare natural compound linked to anti-cancer effects.

Read More
Health

Scientists reverse Alzheimer’s in mice and restore memory: Study

Scientists reverse Alzheimer’s in mice and restore memory: Study

Alzheimer's has long been considered irreversible, but new research challenges that assumption. Scientists discovered that severe drops in the brain's energy supply help drive the disease, and restoring that balance can reverse damage, even in advanced cases.

Read More
Health

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise: Study

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise: Study

A new study led by researchers at University College London (UCL) shows that chronic exposure to toxic air can significantly diminish the health benefits of regular physical activity.

Read More
Health

Miracle material’s hidden quantum power could transform future

Miracle material’s hidden quantum power could transform future

Researchers have directly observed Floquet effects in graphene for the first time, settling a long-running scientific debate.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.