City
Epaper

Scientists reveal why one type of chemotherapy works best in bladder cancer

By ANI | Updated: January 26, 2024 21:55 IST

Washington DC [US], January 26 : According to a study published in Cell Reports Medicine in January, researchers at ...

Open in App

Washington DC [US], January 26 : According to a study published in Cell Reports Medicine in January, researchers at Tisch Cancer Institute showed that a certain form of chemotherapy boosts the immune system's ability to fight bladder cancer, especially when paired with immunotherapy.

These findings may explain why the approach, cisplatin chemotherapy, can lead to cure in a small subset of patients with metastatic, or advanced, bladder cancer. Researchers also believe that their findings could explain why clinical trials combining another type of chemotherapy, carboplatin-based chemo, with immunotherapy have not been successful but others that use cisplatin with immunotherapy are successful.

"We have known for decades that cisplatin works better than carboplatin in bladder cancer, however, the mechanisms underlying those clinical observations have remained elusive until now," said the study's lead author Matthew Galsky, M.D., Co-Director of the Center of Excellence for Bladder Cancer at The Tisch Cancer Institute at Mount Sinai. "This study provides clues as to why cisplatin-based chemotherapy may achieve durable disease control in a subset of patients with metastatic bladder cancer, provides clues as to which patients may derive such benefit, and provides a foundation for building even better treatment regimens that exploit the immunomodulatory effects of cisplatin-based chemotherapy."

Bladder cancer affects about 83,000 people in the United States annually. Metastatic bladder cancer is particularly hard to cure with current treatments, so these findings are an important step to most effectively use the drugs available and determine effective combination therapies.

The study found that cisplatin chemotherapy may work better when the body has generated a pre-existing, but restrained, immune response against the tumor. The study further found that cisplatin damages DNA in cancer cells, which may lead to changes in expression of genes that might improve the ability of the body's immune system to detect cancer cells.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIsraeli PM hopes to bring all hostages home within days as Egypt to host talks over US ceasefire proposal

LifestyleWeekly Horoscope, October 5, 2025: You Will Not Lose Patience and Emerge Victorious

InternationalRussia's strike on Ukraine trains kills 1, injures 30

NationalBihar polls: EC reviews enforcement strategy to ensure free and fair elections, to address media today

InternationalUK coordination centre for facilitating foreign Sikhs who want to come to Takht Sahib for darshan: SGPC VP

Health Realted Stories

HealthResearch finds fat may secretly fuel Alzheimer's

HealthBill Gates’ endorsement means India’s innovations hold great promise for Global South

HealthStudy shows size, severity of chikungunya outbreaks unpredictable

HealthHealth industry bodies welcome CGHS’ move to revise rates after 15 years

HealthRajasthan cough syrup deaths: All 19 medicines of pharma firm suspended, 3 officials removed