University of Florida Health researchers have discovered that a
rabbit virus can deliver a one-two punch, killing some kinds of cancer
cells while eliminating a common and dangerous complication of bone
marrow transplants. For patients with blood cancers such as leukemia and multiple
myeloma, a bone marrow transplant can be both curative and perilous. It
replenishes marrow lost to disease or chemotherapy but raises the risk
that newly transplanted white blood cells will attack the recipient’s
body. Now researchers say the Myxoma virus, found in rabbits, can do double
duty, stopping the unwanted side effects of a bone marrow transplant
and destroying cancer cells.
The virus could be especially helpful to patients who have recurring
cancer but cannot find a suitable bone marrow donor, said Christopher R.
Cogle, M.D., the study’s lead investigator and an associate professor
in the UF College of Medicine’s division of hematology and oncology.
Bone marrow transplants from partially matched donors carry about an 80
percent risk of graft-versus-host disease, and the myxoma treatment
would address that, Cogle said.The myxoma virus is attached to a type of white blood cell known as a
T-cell. The virus-laden white blood cells can then be delivered as part
of a bone marrow transplant from a donor. That’s when the virus gets
activated and goes to work. It blocks graft-versus-host disease.The white blood cells then deliver the myxoma virus to cancer cells, which are killed off by the virus.
This site is for information on the various Chemo treatments and Stem Cell Therapies since 1992. This journey became bitter sweet in 2014, with the passing of my beautiful and dear wife. Sherry, had fought Non - Hodgkins Lymphoma(NHL) since 1990, in and out of remissions time and time again. From T-Cell therapies(1990's) to Dual Cord Blood Transplant(2014), she was in Clinical Trials over the years. This site is for informational purpose only and is not to promote the use of certain therapies.
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