Off the wire
Tanzanian military plane crash kills 2 solders  • Asylum seekers stage hunger strike in Finland  • EU toughens ban on seal products trade  • French stock market index down 0.65 pct on Thursday  • LME base metals close mixed on Thursday  • Death toll of Egyptians in pilgrimage stampede rises to 122: minister  • Singapore's new cabinet sworn into office  • Indonesia in negotiations with China to finalize fast-train project: minister  • Foreign direct investment in Lithuania grows by almost 2 pct  • Shakhtar lose to PSG 3-0 in UEFA Champions League  
You are here:   Home

Researchers develop new method to trap cancer cells

Xinhua, October 2, 2015 Adjust font size:

An international team has discovered a new way to potentially "fence in" a tumor and help stop cancer cells spreading, according to a study released Thursday by Cancer Research UK.

Tumors cause cells, called fibroblasts, to stiffen the surrounding tissue so that cancer cells can grip it, which allows them to tunnel through to the blood stream and spread around the body, the study shows.

Researchers from Francis Crick Institute and the University of Copenhagen said that by using experimental drugs, they were able to stop the fibroblasts from stiffening the tissue around tumors. Thus the healthy tissue trapped the cancer cells, blocking their movement away from the tumor.

They tested the new approach on mice, and the results showed that targeting fibroblasts reduced the movement of cancer cells from the tumor to the lungs and liver through the blood stream.

Since most deaths from cancer are caused when cancer cells travel to new sites in the body and grow as secondary tumors, the new method may lead to better ways to control the disease and save more lives, according to the researchers.

"This could be an exciting new way to harness the potential of the healthy tissue surrounding cancers to contain and restrain aggressive tumors, stopping cancer cells from breaking away and moving to new places in the body," said Dr. Erik Sahai from the Francis Crick Institute. He is the co-lead author of the study. Endit