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Removing a brain tumor makes remaining cancer more aggressive

 

UNC-Chapel Hill researchers show that glioblastomas are fundamentally different before and after surgery

 

(Chapel Hill, N.C.—June 29, 2016) — Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have found that removing a glioblastoma tumor from the brain causes any cancer left behind to grow 75 percent faster than the original tumor did, which helps to explain why this cancer is so lethal.

 

“A glioblastoma is fundamentally a different disease before and after surgery,” said Shawn Hingtgen, who led the work at the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy. “The process of removing the tumor speeds up the cancer such that we have to rethink of how to treat the disease differently after the surgery.”

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Speed Cancer: Surgically removing a brain tumor causes star-shaped astrocytes to send signals that stimulate any cancer cells left behind to move and grow 75 percent faster than they did before the tumor was removed.

 

The work, which was published in the journal Neuro-Oncology, will allow researchers to understand the effect of surgery on the brain and tumor, potentially leading to new therapeutic targets that will tailor postoperative treatment to the new disease.

 

“Drugs are developed against large, solid tumors, but they’re actually used to treat the residual disease: the two things are not the same,” said Ryan Miller, a neuropathologist at the UNC School of Medicine and member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

 

Glioblastomas are deadly because they diffusely invade the brain. Surgery is the standard of care, but unlike tumors elsewhere in the body, surgeons can’t cut it all out. Tendrils of the original tumor embed themselves throughout the brain and the tumor begins to regrow. The problem is that not much is known about what happens to the tumor’s remnants and the brain after surgery, raising new questions about how to treat a glioblastoma after removing it.

 

Researchers led by Hingtgen, also a UNC Lineberger member, are working to perfect a stem-cell treatment that can hunt down and kill the cancer cells that are inevitably left behind when a brain tumor is surgically removed.

 

To test their treatment, they had to develop a mouse model of the brain after surgery. “Testing them in a model that contains a solid tumor is not accurate in many ways,” said Hingtgen.

 

Developing the new model fell to Onyi Okolie, a graduate student working in Hingtgen’s laboratory. A tumor is implanted and allowed to grow in the mouse to the point where a patient would start experiencing symptoms, such as headache, seizures or an altered mental state. Okolie then removes about 90 percent of the tumor, which is comparable to what surgeons are able to remove in human patients.

 

The trauma of surgery causes astrocytes, star-shaped glial cells, to secrete chemicals. The team found that these signals reach the cancer cells and spur them into action.

 

“The remaining cancer cells multiply and they move, both of which are not good,” Hingtgen said. The regrowth rate was significantly increased compared to the growth rate of the preoperative tumor. The tumor was now more aggressive such that the cancer cells began moving and growing approximately 75 percent faster than they did before the tumor was removed.”

 

“In cancer, we always ask is it the seed or the soil?” Miller said. “A seed can go bad and turn cancerous, or the soil can turn a bad seed worse. Surgery changes the soil and makes the bad seed much more aggressive.”

 

About the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

 

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the nation’s first public university, is a global higher education leader known for innovative teaching, research and public service. A member of the prestigious Association of American Universities, Carolina regularly ranks as the best value for academic quality in U.S. public higher education. Now in its third century, the University offers 77 bachelor’s, 113 master’s, 68 doctorate and seven professional degree programs through 14 schools and the College of Arts and Sciences. Every day, faculty – including two Nobel laureates – staff and students shape their teaching, research and public service to meet North Carolina’s most pressing needs in every region and all 100 counties. Carolina’s more than 308,000 alumni live in all 50 states and 150 countries. More than 167,000 live in North Carolina.

 

UNC Communications and Public Affairs contact: Thania Benios, (919) 962-8596, thania_beniois@unc.edu

 

UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy contact: David Etchison, (919) 966-7744, david_etchison@unc.edu

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