Lung cancer treatment getting safer by a new method

October 12, 2011 08:49 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 12:54 am IST - London

Children supported by `Ray of Life Trust’ for Cancer treatment, at Special Children’s’ Day Celebrations for them held in Chennai. A file photo: S.S. Kumar

Children supported by `Ray of Life Trust’ for Cancer treatment, at Special Children’s’ Day Celebrations for them held in Chennai. A file photo: S.S. Kumar

For patients of lung cancer, there could be a safer and more efficient treatment in the offing as researchers in Scotland are developing a method to give drugs by inhalation rather than the approach of intravenous delivery currently followed.

The system could administer the treatment far more quickly than existing methods and without the harmful side effects associated with current systems, which can cause kidney damage.

Scientists at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland have devised a method for giving drugs by inhalation to patients through a nebuliser, rather than the current approach of intravenous delivery, the University said in a release on Wednesday.

It could enable health authorities to deliver the drugs in smaller doses without diminution of benefit to patients.

Lung cancer and mesothelioma caused 4,147 deaths in Scotland in 2009, and deaths of women from the disease increased by 12 per cent in the preceding decade, despite a corresponding fall of 20 per cent among men.

Dr Chris Carter, a Senior Lecturer the Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, led the research, partnered by Professor Alex Mullen and Dr Valerie Ferro.

She said: “Increasing awareness of cancer risks and improvements in treatment do not alter the fact that it remains one of Scotland’s biggest killers and lung cancer is its most common form”.

“This means that new, improved treatments are still essential. By delivering cisplatin, one of the most widely used drugs for lung cancer, in a vaporised form, we would be able to get it to the cancerous cells and avoid the damage to healthy cells which can be hugely debilitating to patients.

“It would make the treatment far less onerous for them and we hope it would help them to live longer”.

The research is an example of the pioneering work of the Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences in developing new medicines for illnesses and conditions including infectious diseases, cancer, heart disease, and schizophrenia.

An eight million pounds fundraising campaign is underway for the Institute’s new 36 million pound building, to expand and enhance its innovative research and education in medicine discovery, development and use.

The research received funding from Scottish Enterprise’s Proof of Concept Programme, which supports the pre-commercialisation of leading-edge technologies emerging from Scotland’s universities, research institutes and NHS Boards.

It helps researchers to export their ideas and inventions from the lab to the global marketplace and create new sustainable technology businesses in Scotland or license the technology to Scottish companies.

The programme is developed and operated by Scottish Enterprise in partnership with key stakeholders including Scottish Government, Universities Scotland and the Scottish Funding Council.

It is partly funded by the European Union.

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