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Stem Cells That Fuel Brain Cancer Found
By Amanda Gardner - HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 17 (HealthDayNews) -- Canadian scientists have found
cancer stem cells that seem to fuel the uncontrolled growth of
malignant brain tumors.

If they could be targeted with a drug, these troublemaking cells
might hold the key to successful treatment of an aggressive and
deadly cancer.

The finding appears in the Nov. 18 issue of Nature.

"It's very preliminary, but very interesting," said Dr. Robert Aiken,
director of medical neurological oncology at Continuum Cancer Centers
in New York City. "It basically demonstrates a way of discriminating
within a tumor those cells that perpetuate the tumor from those which
just basically take up space."

The replicating cells, Aiken added, are the ones that doctors would
want to destroy.

Cells with stem cell properties had already been found in leukemia
and in breast cancer. They represent only a fraction of the total
number of cells making up the tumor, though.

"These cancer stem cells are probably the most primitive or most
embryonic of the cells in a tumor, and replicate and go on to cause
all of the mischief and damage that tumors cause," Aiken said.

The cells "have nothing to do with stem cells that we work on to
transplant or to cure Parkinson's disease," added Dr. Viviane Tabar,
an assistant professor of neurosurgery and a stem cell scientist at
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.

In this study, researchers from the University of Toronto used
information gleaned from previous laboratory experiments to
distinguish replicating cells from non-replicating cells in human
tumor samples. The replicating cells have a specific marker on their
surface that identifies them. These cells, known as CD133 cells, were
then transplanted into the brains of mice. The cells caused deadly
brain tumors -- medulloblastomas and glioblastomas -- to grow in 16
of 19 rodents.

The research helps provides a new framework with which to think about
cancer, Tabar said.

"We have been thinking of cancer -- and particularly brain tumors --
as a large conglomerate of cells that you try to treat," Tabar
explained. "We're starting to think that the tumor is not really
organized like this but is a hierarchy, whereby there are cells that
matter a lot more than others even though they all look the same."

The next step, she added, would be to determine if there is a pathway
that is associated with the cell that could be targeted with a
medication.

"We know that these surface markers exist on the surface of the self-
perpetuating cancer stem cells, and it certainly does provide a means
of discriminating those stem cells from the rest of the tumor," Aiken
said. "If it's possible to generate a molecule of some sort to
identify these clone cells, it may be possible to selectively destroy
the tumor. But it remains entirely an empirical effort to determine
if that can be done safely."

"It is always exciting to achieve a better understanding of how a
tumor is formed and how it evolves," Tabar added. "I'm sure, from the
patient's perspective, it would be a lot more exciting if we can
associate it with treatment."

More information

For more on brain tumors, visit the National Cancer Institute.
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/brain/

SOURCE: Forbes, NY
http://tinyurl.com/5fya7

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