Researchers Testing New Cancer Treatment

Kattesh Katti, PhD, University of Missouri, prepares gold nanoparticles in his lab.(Credit Justin Kelley, University of Missouri)

Liver cancer is the sixth most common cancer in the world, and now researchers are developing new forms of treatment.

If tests show you have liver cancer, there are several ways to treat the disease. One is removing the cancerous part of the liver. The other is having doctors replace the organ through a transplant operation.

The liver cleans the blood and helps remove toxins from the body. (From the book Anatomy of the Human Body; illustrator Henry Vandyke Carter, 1918.)

Patients who get someone else's liver must take immuno-suppressant drugs the rest of their life. The drugs keep the body from rejecting the new organ. There may be serious side effects that come with taking those powerful medicines.

Chemotherapy and radiation treatments are also used to treat liver and other cancers. Those treatments require the patient to take strong drugs or exposure to radiation. The drugs or radiation destroy the cancer cells. But then, the healthy cells around the tumor are damaged.

Chemotherapy medicine is prepared for a liver cancer patient at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland

Now scientists are working on an experimental, minimally invasive treatment. They say it reduces the chances of harming the patient.

This treatment involves the use of natural, non-poisonous chemicals from plants. That is why the researchers call it a “green” method for fighting cancer.

Kattesh Katti is a professor of radiology and physics at the University of Missouri's School of Medicine. For more than 10 years, he has studied the use of nanotechnology to fight cancer.

Nanotechnology is the science of making things unimaginably small. For this study, Katti used extremely small objects to target and destroy precancerous tumor cells in the livers of mice and human cells in the laboratory.

“It sounds like a fairy tale, but we are really in advanced stages in terms of tumor treatment, in terms of disease diagnostics."

Kattesh Katti used very small particles of gold. The gold was covered in a protective material called gum arabic. It comes from an acacia tree. He says the particles attract precancerous and cancer cells. Those cells are far more affected by lower levels of heat than healthy cells.

Kattesh Katti, PhD, University of Missouri, prepares nanoparticles to fight liver cancer. (Credit Justin Kelley, U. of MO)

Once the particles travel to and connect with the cells, they are heated with a laser. That destroys the cancer cells, but the healthy ones around them live.

Katti explains how the treatment would work on a human patient.

“The patient will be administered with these nano particles. Within a couple of hours, the patient will be treated with lasers, and then the patient can go home. So, there is no radioactivity. There is no toxic waste. There is no toxicity, systemic toxicity, to the patient.”

What that means is the patient would not have the same side effects one can have from radiation and chemotherapy. Chemotherapy drugs often are toxic. While they kill off the cancer tumors, they are also poisonous to the healthy cells and the patient can get very sick.

Katti says the cost of treatment will be low because one gram of gold can be used to treat 50 patients. He says this form of treatment could be used for other types of cancer, arthritis and other diseases.

The next step is testing in human subjects.​

Researchers Investigate New Treatments for Leading Cancers

If this treatment method works, it will be good news for the nearly 800,000 people who are found to have liver cancer every year. It may also help save the lives of some 700,000 people who die every year from the disease.

More than 80 percent of the liver cancer cases are found in less developed countries, with the highest numbers in Asia and Africa.

In the United States, liver cancer is one of the top 10 cancers that kill.

I'm Anne Ball.

Carol Pearson reported on this story for VOANews.com. Anne Ball adapted this story for Learning English. George Grow was the editor.

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Words in This Story

immuno-suppressant - n. a substance that control's someone's immune response to a foreign organ in their body

chemotherapy - n. treatment for disease like cancer that uses strong chemicals to kill the disease

precancerous - adj. tending to become cancerous

minimally invasive - adj. affecting the body in the smallest possible way

fairy tale - n. a children's story with magical creatures that is not true and usually has a happy ending

toxic - adj. containing poisonous substances

exposure - n. the fact or condition of being affected by someone or something else; public attention

attract - v. to pull toward oneself or itself