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Monday, December 23, 2024

New Australian ovarian cancer study offers hope

An Australian oncologist is to conduct a phase II study in a bid to progress vital research into the treatment of ovarian cancer.

Associate Professor Jim Coward has returned promising results with his work on targeting treatment-resistant stem cells to prevent cancer recurrence.

Approximately 1500 Australian women are diagnosed annually with ovarian cancer, which has the lowest five-year survival rate of all gynaecological cancers at 46 per cent.

Despite significant investment in early detection programs and therapeutic research, 80 per cent of sufferers still face a high chance of relapse after initial chemotherapy and becoming incurable.

Data from a phase I study led by Queensland-based Professor Coward in his work with leading care provider the Icon Group, was published earlier this year.

Utilising a new pool of research, he is looking at how cancer stem cells could be causing relapse.

“Survival outcomes in ovarian cancer are poor and sadly most patients … will die with chemotherapy resistant disease,” Professor Coward said.

“Recent evidence suggests this may reflect the existence of ovarian cancer stem cells that remain dormant and resistant to existing treatment like chemotherapy.

“Our research has been investigating these stem cells and targeting these could provide the majority of women who are living with ovarian cancer hope of long-term survival.”

Findings from the phase I trial conducted across three sites in Australia as well as centres in the USA have already been published in Cancers and presented at a leading international research conference.

The study was found to prolong survival in advanced ovarian cancer by inducing ovarian cancer stem cells’ death and making the cells more sensitive to standard chemotherapy.

One of Professor Coward’s patients, Dawn Norris, was diagnosed with Stage 3C ovarian cancer in 2014.

After several surgeries and rounds of chemotherapy she went into remission late that year. However, her cancer continued to return across the next three years with chemotherapy slowly becoming less affective.

Dawn was running out of options and told her odds were not optimistic until Prof Coward presented this clinical trial.

“When I was offered this trial, there was not a doubt in my mind. I thought, if this trial could help me in anyway, I was willing to do it,” she said.

“I knew there was no cure but I always said that I wanted to live long enough to see my grandchildren grow up.

“I’m now 70, still here and happily watching my five grandchildren live their lives. Without this trial I simply wouldn’t be here.”

AAP

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