New Technique -Help
Brain Cancer Patients
New Technique to Help Brain Cancer
Patients
Aug. 23, 2013 — A new
scanning technique developed by Danish and US researchers reveals how
susceptible patients with aggressive brain cancer are to the drugs they receive.
The research behind the ground-breaking technique has just been published in
Nature Medicine.
Each year sees 260 new cases of the most aggressive type of brain
cancer in Denmark. Some patients survive only a few months, while others survive
for 18 months. Only very few, 3.5%, are alive five years after their diagnosis. A new scanning
technique can now reveal how the brain tumour responds to the drug
administered:
"We have
developed an MRI technique which reveals how a patient will respond to the
treatment that inhibits
the growth of new blood vessels to the tumour. The technique allows us
to only select the patients who will actually benefit from the treatment and to
quickly initiate or intensify other treatments for non-responding
patients," says Kim Mouridsen, Associate Professor at Aarhus University
and head of the research group Neuroimaging Methods at MINDLab, Aarhus
University.
He has developed the
new technique together with researchers from Harvard Medical School.
Brain architecture
providing important knowledge
Aggressive brain
cancer is usually treated with drugs that inhibit the growth of new blood vessels, as the most
aggressive brain tumours are constantly trying to produce new blood vessels to
get oxygen. The treatment alleviates the symptoms, but it also increases the
efficacy of radiation therapy because it improves oxygenation.
According to Kim
Mouridsen, the new technique -- Vessel Architectural Imaging -- is an important
step towards better treatment:"Getting more knowledge about what the blood
vessels in the tumour look like will also give us a better understanding of the
mechanisms which are decisive for the
efficacy of the
treatment. And understanding these mechanisms is precisely what we need to be
able to develop and improve the treatment of brain tumours in general."
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