By DAILY MAIL REPORTER PUBLISHED: 18:00 GMT, 13 June 2012 A bug that normally gives children the
sniffles could help fight cancer. Researchers are hopeful that reovirus, which
usually causes mild colds or stomach upsets, has the power to shrink tumours. The
virus, which would be given to outpatients through a drip, could be used in
future to fight diseases including skin and breast cancer. The reovirus kills a
cancer cell by entering it and replicating within it Crucially, it seems to
produce fewer side effects than conventional cancer treatments. Human trials
are being carried out and, if successful, experts predict a cancer-zapping drug
based on the virus could be in widespread use in as little as three years. University of Leeds researcher Professor Alan Melcher
said: ‘Chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery are all valuable treatments but
viruses are potentially a quite different side of treatment that could sit
alongside them.’ Blindness breakthrough
as scientists turn stem cells into tissue that allows humans to see Reovirus
homes in on cancerous cells and kills them, as well as kick-starting the immune
system to fight the disease. Scientists feared the virus would need to be
directly injected into the tumour. But a study, published in the journal
Science Translational Medicine, found it can be given in an intravenous drip. Once
in the body, it then travels on blood cells to tumours. The virus is already
being tested on people with head and neck cancers, with early results described
as ‘encouraging’. If the trial is successful, the treatment could be in
widespread use by 2015. Dr Julie Sharp, of Cancer Research UK , said the study was promising. She
added: ‘We look forward to seeing how this research develops and if this could
one day become part of standard cancer treatment.’
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