http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7003019.stm



*Cancer-fighting transplant hope*

Immune cells taken from one person may be able to join the battle against
cancer in another, says a researcher.

New Scientist reported evidence that certain people seem to have cells with
a more powerful ability to tackle cervical cancer cells in the test tube.

US scientist Dr Zheng Cui now wants to transplant more potent "granulocytes"
into patients.

The finding has surprised some experts, who had thought granulocytes played
a fairly minor role in fighting cancer.

The body's immune system helps beat infections, but also plays a key role in
the destruction of cancer cells.

The idea that an infusion of souped-up immune cells, either from yourself or
a donor, could help you in the struggle against cancer, is not new.

Test tube result

However, the research from Wake Forest University of Medicine in North
Carolina points to a completely different cell as a potential saviour.
Granulocytes are normally associated with the body's response to bacterial
infections.

Dr Cui took blood samples from 100 volunteers, and mixed just their
granulocytes with cervical cancer cells in the laboratory.

He found that one sample appeared to kill 97% of the cancer cells in just
two days, while at the other end of the scale, after 48 hours, one sample
had destroyed just 2% of the cancer cells.

Patients with cancer provided granulocytes with a lower than average
cancer-killing ability, as did people who reported being stressed, or those
over the age of 50.

Remarkably, even the time of year seemed to have an effect on the potency of
granulocytes.

"Nobody seems to have any cancer-killing ability during the winter months
from November to April," said Dr Cui.

In other research, granulocytes from a strain of mice completely resistant
to cancer cured the disease when they were transplanted into other mice.

Dr Cui now plans human trials next summer to see if donor granulocytes -
which are plentiful and easily harvested - can have a similar effect.

Donor attack

However, a British expert pointed to the possible risks of trials.

Although granulocyte transfusions are already given to some patients with
depleted immune systems, they are normally irradiated to make sure that no
other immune cells are given to the patient by mistake.

If this happens it can cause "graft-versus-host" disease, in which the donor
cells recognise their new body as an invader, and launch an attack on it,
with occasionally fatal consequences.

Dr John Gribben, an Cancer Research UK immunologist from St Bartholomew's
Hospital in London, said that he would be surprised if Dr Cui got the
go-ahead for the transplantation of "live" cells into a cancer patient.

"It's more than a theoretical risk, in my view," he said.

He said that the findings were surprising, and that more work needed to be
done to confirm them in a wider variety of cancers, not just cervical
cancers.

"There are quite a lot of people looking into the possibility of cellular
therapies for cancer, but not working on granulocytes."


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