Cancer: hope in the form of an immunosuppressant
[mis à jour le 10 October 2006 à 07h48]
The process of angiogenesis, which is behind the development of a cancerous tumour, is currently the subject of dozens of studies all over the world. One of them mentions the "real potential" of a molecule which until now has been used to prevent the rejection of transplants.
According to researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, rapamycin is capable of inhibiting angiogenesis. Based on work on mice, they observed that this molecule reduced tumour growth as well as the flow of blood in blood vessels. Such promising results that rapamycin is currently being tested in clinical trials in the United States.
Source: Cancer Cell, August 2006
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