Cancer Institute Starts Nanotechnology Drive

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. National Cancer Institute (news - 
web sites) announced a new five-year plan on Monday to develop the 
use of tiny tools to fight cancer, saying nanotechnology just might 
provide the edge needed to defeat the disease. 

Nanotechnology -- the design and use of devices the size of 
molecules -- offers new ways to detect, diagnose and to treat cancer 
at its earliest stages and with minimal side effects, experts told 
reporters. 


"If we can do that then we can eliminate this disease," said Richard 
Smalley, a professor of nanotechnology at Rice University in 
Houston. 


The $144.5 million plan will include the NCI Alliance for 
Nanotechnology in Cancer, an initiative to team up researchers, 
physicians, companies and not-for-profit groups to develop 
nanotechnology products for use in diagnosing and treating cancer. 


Medicine already employs molecular size devices in the shape of 
natural and artificially engineered proteins such as 
antibodies. "What's new is we can build new nano-objects that never 
existed before," Smalley said. 


These can be coated with homing devices such as antibodies, 
artificial or natural, that will find cancerous cells. They could 
also carry drugs to kill the cells or imaging agents to help detect 
cancer, said Dr. Mauro Ferrari, a special adviser to the NCI and a 
professor of biomedical engineering at Ohio State University. 


"By doing this on a very small scale there will be different 
effects," said Dr. Samuel Wickline of Washington University in St. 
Louis. 


"The possibilities are enormous for finding very small cancers far 
earlier than ever before and treating them with powerful drugs at 
the tumor site alone, while at the same time reducing any harmful 
side effects. This initiative will allow us to explore using this 
technology to its full potential." 


A drug delivered using a nano-device, for example, could precisely 
target cancer cells without affecting healthy cells -- the way 
chemotherapy and radiation do now. Drugs based on monoclonal 
antibodies -- engineered immune system proteins -- do this but the 
science could be expanded, the experts said. 


And liposomes, tiny capsules used to carry drugs, can be regarded as 
a "first generation" of nano-scale drug delivery devices. 


Dr. Janet Woodcock, acting deputy commissioner at the Food and Drug 
Administration (news - web sites), said her agency was gearing up to 
approve new nano-devices in medicine. 


"We see potential for novel drug delivery," Woodcock said. But any 
new product will have to pass the standard hurdles of proving safe, 
effective and of being mass-produced. 


There will also be some new bureaucratic hoops to pass through, 
Woodcock predicted, especially if the minuscule new products might 
be categorized both as devices and as drugs or diagnostics. 


NCI Deputy Director Anna Barker said the plan would include $90 
million for at least five new centers of excellence over five years, 
$16 million for training and $38 million in grants to researchers 
for specific projects. 








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