Hope has enormous significance for anyone who has experienced a cancer diagnosis.
Emmie Luther-Hiltz was just 33 years old when she woke up one Easter Sunday to find a golf-ball-sized lump in her breast 鈥 a lump that had not been there the day before.
鈥淚t was an aggressive cancer with a very tough prognosis,鈥 says Ms. Luther-Hiltz, whose two children were just five and eight years old at the time. After having her breast and grossly malignant lymph nodes removed, she endured six months of chemotherapy.
Remarkably, she is alive and well 16 years later, but that doesn鈥檛 mean her fear of cancer has gone away. 鈥淏reast cancer can recur after 15, even 20 years,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e had a number of scares and, just last year, had my other breast removed when we found a benign lump.鈥
As a cancer survivor who works closely with patients through Cancer Care Nova Scotia, Ms. Luther-Hiltz is heartened by the recent news that 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 virologist Patrick Lee has found a way to kill the very cells that lead to cancer recurrence. These are the cancer stem cells. Like a queen ant churning out eggs, cancer stem cells continuously produce new cancer cells.
鈥淵ou can kill all the ants in the anthill, but if you don鈥檛 get the queen, you will still have ants,鈥 says Dr. Lee, Cameron Chair in Basic Cancer Research at the 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 Medical School. 鈥淯nfortunately, chemotherapy and radiation do not eliminate the cancer stem cells and they keep on producing cancer cells.鈥
Dr. Lee鈥檚 landmark finding 鈥 that a common virus effectively targets and kills breast cancer stem cells 鈥 recently appeared in the prestigious journal, Molecular Therapy. When the story broke, it led local newscasts, spread like wildfire online, and sparked a buzz of excitement in the cancer community.
鈥淭his is a fabulous discovery,鈥 says Emmie Luther-Hiltz. 鈥淲hat it means is hope. Hope has
enormous significance for anyone who has experienced聽a cancer diagnosis.鈥
Dr. Lee is thrilled by his team鈥檚 findings, as he has been on a mission for the past two years to prove that human reovirus can kill cancer stem cells. Unlike most cancer experiments, which rely on cancer cell lines developed for the laboratory, Dr. Lee鈥檚 experiments used fresh tumour tissue from local breast cancer patients.
鈥淐ell lines are grown in vitro so long, it鈥檚 hard to be certain your experiment is reflecting real life,鈥 says Dr. Lee. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very exciting to see these results in real biopsy material.鈥
He credits his collaborator, Dr. Carman Giacomantonio, a Capital Health surgeon and associate professor in 新加坡六合彩开奖直播鈥檚 Division of Surgical Oncology, for his dedication to the project. 鈥淐arman would bring us the breast tumour tissues within an hour or two of removing them from a patient.鈥
Whenever tumour tissues arrived in the lab, postdoctoral fellow Paola Marcato and research assistant Cheryl Dean worked late into the night, implanting tiny pieces of tumour in the mammary fat pads of mice while the grafts were still fresh enough to take hold and form tumours.
After injecting reovirus into the tumours, the researchers noted how quickly the cancer stem cells were dying compared to the regular cancer cells. 鈥淭he cancer stem cells died at the same rate as the regular cancer cells,鈥 says Dr. Lee. 鈥淭his is exactly what we had hoped to see.鈥
The media spotlight is nothing new for Dr. Lee. In 1998, he galvanized the world scientific community with his first groundbreaking discovery 鈥 that reovirus selectively targets and kills cancer cells without harming healthy cells.
鈥淏ut proving we can target cancer stem cells is even more exciting than the original discovery,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t means we finally have a way to get to the root of the problem.鈥
Reovirus kills cancers of the lung, prostate, colon, ovary and brain, as well as lymphoma and melanoma, as shown by Dr. Lee鈥檚 previous studies. 鈥淲e have every reason to believe that reovirus will kill the cancer stem cells in these and other kinds of cancer,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e plan to test it against prostate cancer stem cells next.鈥
As the researchers explore additional potential in their lab, a Calgary-based company, Oncolytics Biotech, is testing the virus in cancer patients.
鈥淲e have had dramatic results in both phase one and phase two clinical trials in a wide range of cancers, including sarcomas, ovarian, pancreatic and advanced head and neck cancers,鈥 says Matt Coffey, the company鈥檚 chief operating officer. 鈥淣ow we鈥檙e getting ready to launch international phase three clinical trials.鈥
The pair began working together at the University of Calgary on the original reovirus discovery. Oncolytics Biotech was launched to develop and test reovirus-based cancer therapies.
鈥淕etting the cancer stem cells is key,鈥 says Dr. Coffey. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not here to delay cancer, we鈥檙e here to cure it.鈥
The worst side effects in cancer patients have been mild, flu-like symptoms, he notes. 鈥淭he virus causes no disease, which makes it safe for patients and easy to work with.鈥
Meanwhile, Dr. Lee and his team are learning more about the cancer-killing advantages of reovirus every day.
鈥淲e think of cancer cells being so tough, but they are weak in the face of the virus,鈥 says Dr. Lee. 鈥淐ancer cells are not capable of mounting a defense against the reovirus. They actually help the virus reproduce and form new virus particles that are many times more infectious than the parent virus!鈥
These virulent particles then rupture the cancer cell and circulate around the body, killing not just the primary tumour, but also cancer cells that have spread. At the same time, they stimulate a powerful anti-cancer immune response.
Dr. Lee and postdoctoral fellow Shashi Gujar are working on a way to maximize this anti-cancer response, while minimizing the immune system鈥檚 reaction to the reovirus. 鈥淲e want to tone down the anti-virus response so reovirus can freely infect and kill cancer cells while helping the body mount its own anti-cancer attack,鈥 notes Dr. Lee.
Drs. Marcato and Gujar are among the many young cancer researchers who have flocked to 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 since Dr. Lee joined the medical school in 2003. Senior researchers have also come to work in the university鈥檚 increasingly dynamic cancer research community, which has grown from a handful of scientists to more than 50 principal investigators.
This growth spurt began with a remarkable gift to the 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 Medical Research Foundation. In 1999, the late Beatrice Hunter bequeathed $12.5 million to the foundation for cancer research, in memory of her parents, Dr. Owen and Mrs. Pearle Cameron. This gift provides $500,000 to cancer research at 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 Medical School each year. It also created the Cameron Chair in Basic Cancer Research, the leadership position that attracted Dr. Lee to 新加坡六合彩开奖直播.
Dr. Lee is a founding member of the Beatrice Hunter Cancer Research Institute, established in April 2009 to foster a coordinated cancer research effort in Atlantic Canada.
鈥淧atrick Lee has helped create an environment where world-class cancer research can thrive,鈥 says Theresa Marie Underhill, chief operating officer of Cancer Care Nova Scotia, which co-funds his cancer stem cell research with the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation鈥揂tlantic Region. 鈥淚t鈥檚 rare for us, as the provincial cancer agency, to fund basic research, but Dr. Lee鈥檚 reovirus work is very close to patients, and even involved cancer patients going through surgery, so it was the right fit.鈥
鈥淔or an organization dedicated to a future without breast cancer, research is the most significant part of our work,鈥 says Nancy Margeson, CEO, Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation鈥揂tlantic Region. 鈥淭o have a breakthrough of this magnitude substantiates our faith that one day our vision will come true.鈥
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Cancer Society and the Terry Fox Foundation are also staunch supporters of Dr. Lee鈥檚 research. As he notes, every grant and every discovery builds on the one before, leading to those eureka moments that change everything.
For Emmie Luther-Hiltz, whose parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and siblings have all battled cancer, Patrick Lee鈥檚 discoveries offer hope for the future. 鈥淐ancer is a way of life in our family,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his kind of news means that maybe our children won鈥檛 have to live with such an overwhelming fear of developing cancer. Hope is on the horizon.鈥