London: British researchers have in a breakthrough developed a new drug that works against all of the main types of primary bone cancer and increases survival rates by 50 per cent without the need for surgery or chemotherapy. Cancer that starts in the bones, rather than cancer that has spread to the bones, predominantly affects children. Current treatment is gruelling, with outdated chemotherapy cocktails and limb amputation. Despite all of this, the five-year survival rate is poor at just 42 per cent - largely because of how rapidly bone cancer spreads to the lungs.
But a new study, published in the Journal of Bone Oncology, shows how a new drug called CADD522 blocks a gene associated with driving the cancer's spread in mice implanted with human bone cancer. Unlike chemotherapy, it also doesn't cause toxic side effects like hair loss, tiredness and sickness. "Primary bone cancer is a type of cancer that begins in the bones. It's the third most common solid childhood cancer, after brain and kidney, with around 52,000 new cases every year worldwide," said lead researcher Dr. Darrell Green, from University of East Anglia (UEA) in the UK.
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