The deadliest and most common type of brain cancer has a strange
bedfellow: cytomegalovirus, a kind of herpes present in about 80 percent
of the U.S. population. Now scientists are exploiting this coincidence
to treat the cancer with a vaccine that targets the virus and slows
tumor regrowth.



In 2002 scientists showed that cytomegalovirus, or CMV, was active in
the brain tumors but not the surrounding healthy tissue of all 27
patients they tested who had glioblastoma multiforme. CMV is dormant and
undetectable in most people.



Neuroscientists Duane Mitchell of Duke University Medical Center and his
colleagues confirmed in 2007 that CMV is active in at least 90 percent
of glioblastoma tumors. Now Mitchell's team has developed an
experimental vaccine that triggers the immune system to attack CMV,
thereby attacking its tumor tissue home. As reported at the American
Society of Clinical Oncology meeting earlier this year, the vaccine,
together with radiation and chemotherapy, prevented the brain tumor from
reemerging after surgery for 12 months as compared with the typical six
to seven months no vaccine. Patients' average life span increased
from 14 months to more than 20.



So does this herpes virus cause cancer? The answer is unclear: tumor
cells may simply be a fertile ground for growing the virus, as cells
such as these often lack the normal immune functions that suppress CMV
reproduction. But University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers reported
in May that the virus has the ability to take over a cell's braking
mechanism and cause uncontrolled reproduction. Even so, the numbers do
not seem to add up: four of five Americans has CMV, but only about one
in 30,000 ends up with glioblastoma. And a small number of glioblastoma
patients do not have CMV in their tumors.


"Most evidence to date does not support CMV being a cancer-causing
virus," Mitchell says. Don Diamond, a virologist at the City of Hope
Cancer Center near Los Angeles, agrees: his extensive research on CMV
and cancer has convinced him the virus does not cause tumors. But for
patient it does not matter whether the connection between herpes and
brain cancer is causal or not-the vaccine appears to work. Mitchell
hopes to have the vaccine ready for market in a few years.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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