Study: Treat brain tumors with drug combos
Ronald DePinho, MD, director of the Center for Applied Cancer Science at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, says that using three or more kinase-blocking therapies like Gleevec and Tarceva in combination are needed to shut down abnormal cell-growth signals. He's calling for a quick ramp-up of new clinical trials to test his findings on the subject, which were published online by Science. The study focused on glioblastoma multiforme, an aggressive brain tumor that is almost always fatal. The scientists also found similar patterns of multiply activated RTKs in other common cancers of the pancreas and lung.
"This is a transformative finding that will motivate clinicians and our pharmaceutical colleagues to design clinical trials with regimens using several inhibitors," said DePinho.
- check out this release for more
Related Articles:
Drug combos not a sure thing. Report
New combos of old drugs may be boon to biotech. Report
Gleevec wins new approvals and a warning. Report
FDA panel endorses Tarceva for pancreatic cancer. Report
Comments
Post new comment
Paid Research Reports
- RNA therapy: the next big thing after monoclonal antibodies?
- Biotech M&A Strategies: Deal assessments, trends and future prospects
- The Dermatology Market Outlook to 2013: Competitive landscape, pipeline analysis and growth opportunities
- Pipeline Insight: Cancer Overview - Breast, Gynecological, Genitourinary - Diverse drugs approaching the market for many tumor t
- Sales Force Effectiveness


