CANCER WATCH!!!9 OF THE TOUGHEST CANCER FIGHTS
We’re asking
scientists to tackle 9 of the toughest challenges in cancer research
It started with a challenge.
Or 7 to be exact, 7 challenges we issued to
the global research community, challenges that scientists, doctors and people
affected by cancer all agreed would help us make the radical process we need to
beat cancer. Challenges that launched our most ambitious research initiative
ever.
Since we issued this first set of challenges
back in 2015, we’ve funded 7 international teams to tackle wide-ranging issues
from preventing unnecessary breast
cancer treatment to understanding if the bacteria
in our gut could help treat cancer.
But we’re not done yet. While our teams have
been sinking their teeth into the challenges, we’ve been on a global hunt for
the next set of problems, working with researchers and people affected by
cancer.
And we’ve been more ambitious than ever.
We’ve partnered with the National Cancer
Institute (NCI) – the US federal government’s principal agency for cancer
research and training – to build on the success of our Grand Challenge
initiative and stimulate even more innovative research collaborations. The new partnership brings
the Cancer Grand Challenges investment up to £426 million to date.
Here’s the latest line up of Cancer Grand
Challenges that we want the world’s brightest minds to tackle.
How do some cells stay normal despite having
cancer-causing mistakes in their DNA?
Cancer develops when mistakes in our DNA – called
mutations – cause cells to grow and divide uncontrollably. But the presence of
these errors doesn’t guarantee cancer will occur. Surprisingly, some cells
continue to behave normally even when they have lots of ‘cancer-causing’
mutations.
Why some cells can resist becoming cancerous
but other can’t remains a mystery. Researchers suspect that factors like
ageing, the immune system and a cell’s environment could play a part.
If scientists could understand more about what
makes our cells ‘normal’ and exactly what tips them into becoming cancerous,
they may be able to develop new tools to help catch cancer early and design new
drugs to target this transition and stop cancer before it starts.
Can we develop new ways to deliver drugs into
any and every cell?
New technology has allowed scientists to
engineer smarter cancer drugs that can precisely target and kill tumour cells
in the lab. But just doing this in the lab isn’t good enough.
Getting drugs inside the ‘right’ cells is a
major hurdle when it comes to designing new treatments. This task is
particularly challenging for larger and more complex drugs – known as
macromolecules – that are too big to slip into cells without help.
But what if we could find innovative new ways
to deliver these drugs to all cells in the body, including hard-to-reach places
like the brain, but only kill the cancer cells?
To do this, scientists could exploit
innovative delivery methods like nanoparticles – tiny, drug-carrying vessels
1,000 times smaller than a human hair – or mimic the tactics viruses and toxins
use to infiltrate cells.
This is potentially one of the biggest hurdles
facing researchers, but there’s so much to gain if it works. This research
could unlock new ways to treat not only cancer, but many other diseases.
Can we take away cancer cells’ power to
divide?
Under certain stressful conditions – like when
their DNA is damaged – cells can stop dividing and enter a state called
senescence. It’s a safety mechanism to stop faulty cells from multiplying.
Senescence can help protect us against cancer
by forcing would-be cancer cells to stop dividing before it’s too late. And
research suggests cancer cells can become senescent too, halting their growth.
The big question we want scientists to answer
is can we trigger cancer cells to become senescent? And can we find ways to
target and eradicate these cells from the body?
What are the potential benefits and risks of
e-cigarette use around the world?
E-cigarettes have become increasingly popular
over the last decade, with an estimated 3 million people in
Great Britain using them in 2019. The majority of these people used to smoke.
While e-cigarettes can help some people to
stop smoking and the evidence so far suggests they’re far less harmful than
tobacco, it’s still not clear what effects vaping has in the long term. And
there are also questions about how the increased use of e-cigarettes might be
affecting society as a whole – particularly young people.
We need to shed light on these unknowns and in
particular provide an answer to the crucial question: how safe are e-cigarettes
and are there long-term health consequences?
How does inflammation cause cancer?
Inflammation is one of the body’s most
powerful weapons. It’s our immune system’s first line of defence against
infection and injury, involving a cascade of chemicals and immune cells that
take down potential threats and help to heal our wounds.
But as well as preventing infections and
repairing injuries, inflammation can cause collateral damage and sometimes lead
to cancer. It’s estimated that up to 1 in 4 around the world are linked to
chronic inflammation.
The link between inflammation and cancer was
first made over 150 years ago. But we still don’t fully understand the link
between inflammation and cancer, including how many types of inflammation
exist, and which can cause the disease.
We’ve already got a team of scientists unravelling
the mystery of inflammation and cancer, but we think there’s even more to learn.
Because if researchers could untangle the complex web of interactions involved
in inflammation and pinpoint which processes cause cancer, they could reveal
new ways to prevent cancer from ever starting, potentially saving thousands of
lives.
Can we find new ways to treat solid tumours in
children?
Despite great progress in understanding the
biology of some children’s cancers, the way we treat these diseases –
especially solid tumours – has barely changed in over 30 years. And current
treatments can have severe, life-long side effects.
We desperately need new, more specific
treatments that are gentler and more effective for children living with these
diseases.
We’re beginning to understand that solid
tumours in children are very different from those in adults. If we could
understand more about these differences and find ways of targeting them, we
could create new drugs or reuse existing ones to better treat children’s
cancer.
How does DNA outside of our chromosomes helps
cancer to survive and evolve?
Our DNA is mainly coiled into structures
called chromosomes, which keep its long strands neatly organised. But cells can
also contain small rings of DNA that exist separately from these chromosomes,
called extrachromosomal DNA.
These DNA loops are most commonly found in
microbes like bacteria, but new research has
revealed that cancer cells contain vast amounts of extrachromosomal DNA, often
containing copies of genes that help the cancer grow and survive. These rogue
pieces of DNA can also change and multiply rapidly and are believed to help
cancer to adapt, evolve and become resistant to treatment.
But the exact role of extrachromosomal DNA in
cancer is unclear.
If we can understand how these
extrachromosomal loops arise and change in cancer, we could create new
therapies to target them.
Why do some cancers come back many years after
treatment?
Sometimes, patients who seem to have been
successfully treated for cancer can have the disease come back years or even
decades later, often without any warning.
It’s thought that cancer cells that weren’t
killed by initial treatment can go to sleep, lying dormant until they’re coaxed
out of their slumber and begin to dive again, a phenomenon we’ve written about before.
But what causes some cancer cells to go sleep,
or where they hide when they’re asleep, is still a bit of a mystery. Scientists
also don’t know for sure what wakes these cells up years later.
It’s a challenge that’s cropped up
before. And we need answers.
Understanding more about slumbering cancer
cells could help scientists find these cells and eliminate them. Or, if we
could predict when they’re about to rise from their slumber, we could keep them
sleeping permanently.
Can we treat extreme weight loss and weakness
in people with late-stage cancer?
In the late stages of cancer, some people
experience extreme weight loss and muscle wasting – a condition called cachexia. It can
also lead to weakness and fatigue, with every-day activities becoming
challenging.
We don’t exactly know what happens in
cachexia. But what’s clear is that it’s very different to general weight loss
and can’t be completely reversed by eating more or taking nutritional
supplements.
Worringly, cancer treatments are often less
effective in people who have cachexia and other signs of deteriorating
well-being.
If scientists can unpick the complicated
pathways involved, they could develop new treatments to improve the quality of
life and survival of people with late-stage cancer.
If you’re a researcher
and want to build a team to take on this challenge, visit our Cancer Grand Challenges website to find
out how you can apply.
With these 9 challenges, we’re pushing researchers to the edge
of impossible. We can’t wait to see who will rise to the challenge.
CULLED FROM THE CANCER RESEARCH ,U.K.PORTAL
No comments:
Post a Comment