Gene-targeting drug to help treat cancer
In a breakthrough compared to the discovery of penicillin, British scientists claimed to have developed a new gene targeting drug that they say could herald a new era in cancer treatment.
The pill, which rapidly shrinks the most deadly of skin tumours and has produced “spectacular” trial results, is the first cancer drug to harness knowledge from the full decoding of human DNA.
Known as PLX4032, the drug dramatically cut tumour size in 24 of the 32 men and women taking part in a trial. In two other cases it made the tumour completely disappear.
All the patients had late-stage malignant melanoma, in which the cancer had spread through the body, the Daily Mail reported.
Mark Walport, director of the Wellcome Trust, which played a key role in producing the first human genetic blueprint, likened the drug’s discovery to a “penicillin moment”.
Just as the discovery of penicillin opened the floodgates to an array of bacteria-fighting antibiotics, our ever-growing knowledge about DNA and its quirks and flaws is leading to the production of many more drugs like PLX4032, he said.
He said: “We have moved into a rational era of understanding cancer. This is about identifying the cancer, knowing what its changes are and being able to follow it in ways we could never have dreamt of before.”
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