Our immune system sends 'alarm' signals which could serve as early warning of returning cancer, a new study has found.
Scientists have found that the immune system's behaviour can act as an early warning alarm that detects cancer recurrence, and this could offer a chance for pre-emptive treatment before the disease takes hold for the second time.
When cancers go into remission, small groups of cells sometimes hide away, lying dormant until they reawaken and grow once more.
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The study, in mice, involved researchers looking for early signs of the immune response 'kicking in' indicating that the cancer was once more awake. This allowed them to predict accurately when the cancer was about to return.
"The ability to predict when a patient's cancer will come back would be an invaluable tool in treating the disease, allowing doctors to treat the recurrence rapidly and effectively before it takes hold," Professor Alan Melcher, a Cancer Research UK senior clinical research fellow at the University of Leeds, said.
"But we now need to find a way of using this knowledge to develop a test for patients whose cancer could take several years to reappear," said Melcher.
The scientists found that they could deliberately reawaken the cancer, before it has evolved the ability to evade the immune system, and then use the mice's own defences to track it down and kill the remaining cancer cells.
In the study, this approach cured up to 100 per cent of the mice that would otherwise have relapsed.
Researchers believe that this could possibly lead to a change in how cancers are treated, by waking them back up before they're ready to beat the immune system.
But this would need highly effective monitoring and failsafe treatments, which are not yet widely available for most cancers in the clinic.
Current approaches are limited to having to wait until the cancer reappears by which time it has sometimes evolved to evade common treatments.
"This approach to reawakening the cancer deliberately may seem controversial, but a similar approach is already used in some patients with thyroid cancers," said Professor Kevin Harrington, Joint Head of the Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging at The Institute of Cancer Research, London.
The study was published in Nature Medicine.