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Novel approach: cancer drug might ease scleroderma.


The chemotherapy drug paclitaxel paclitaxel /pac·li·tax·el/ (pak?li-tak´sel) an antineoplastic that promotes and stabilizes polymerization of microtubules, isolated from the Pacific yew tree (Taxus brevifolia); , when given to mice, shows signs of impeding the skin disease scleroderma scleroderma
 or progressive systemic sclerosis

Chronic disease that hardens the skin and fixes it to underlying structures. Swelling and collagen buildup lead to loss of elasticity. The cause is unknown.
, researchers report. By slowing skin thickening, paclitaxel might offer a treatment for a disease that has defied cure.

Scleroderma results when excess collagen protein accumulates in the skin, rendering it fibrous and inflexible. This toughening can cause pain and disfigurement dis·fig·ure  
tr.v. dis·fig·ured, dis·fig·ur·ing, dis·fig·ures
To mar or spoil the appearance or shape of; deform.



[Middle English disfiguren, from Old French desfigurer
. In some patients, collagen collects in the blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
, heart, or lungs, any of which can be lethally damaged. Scleroderma seems to stem from an immune backlash against the body's own tissues, although what triggers the disease is unclear.

Cardiologist Pascal J. Goldschmidt-Clermont of Duke University School of Medicine The Duke University School of Medicine is part of the Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina. Curriculum
The School of Medicine has a unique curriculum among American medical schools.
 in Durham, N.C., and his colleagues became interested in paclitaxel, marketed as Taxol, because previous experiments had indicated that the drug could stabilize microtubules--tiny conveyor belts in cells that normally help them function. The researchers had suspected that destabilized microtubules Microtubules
Slender, elongated anatomical channels in worms.

Mentioned in: Antihelminthic Drugs
 trigger a process that activates the protein TGF beta, a growth factor that stimulates cells to produce excess collagen.

To test whether calming microtubules with paclitaxel would fight collagen buildup, Goldschmidt-Clermont and his team transplanted skin grafts from people with scleroderma into mice. Some transplants were first soaked in paclitaxel, while others weren't. The treated grafts produced significantly less collagen than did the untreated grafts, the researchers report in the December PLoS Medicine.

Paclitaxel also inhibited the activity of TGF beta, the new data suggest.

"This is an intriguing study," says John Varga, a rheumatologist rheumatologist /rheu·ma·tol·o·gist/ (roo?mah-tol´ah-jist) a specialist in rheumatology.

rheu·ma·tol·o·gist
n.
A specialist in the diagnosis and treatment of rheumatic disorders.
 at the Northwestern University School of Medicine in Chicago. In scleroderma research, "targeting TGF beta is where the action is." But Varga cautions that the study is preliminary. "To extrapolate extrapolate - extrapolation  from this mouse model to human scleroderma is hard," he says.

The study authors acknowledge that paclitaxel has one troubling effect. In some cancer patients, it actually causes collagen buildup in the skin. While that risk needs to be further investigated, Goldschmidt-Clermont says, the amount of paclitaxel used in these skin grafts was proportionately much less than that used in patients receiving it as chemotherapy.

Although some drugs can ease lung complications in scleroderma patients, "there isn't any one drug available that treats the disease overall," says Carolyn Weller, vice president of education and research at the Seleroderma Foundation in Danvers, Mass.

If further research indicates a benefit from paclitaxel in people, it would join two other cancer drugs--imatinib mesylate (Gleevec) and rituximab (Rittuxan)--being investigated for use against scleroderma.

Roughly 300,000 people in the United States have scleroderma.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 19, 2005
Words:411
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