More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Using Prozac? in the fight against treatment resistant cancers
Anxiety Insights
Friday, 19 December 2008

Fluoxetine (Prozac?) is regularly prescribed to ease the emotional pain of patients who are being treated for cancer. But can this common antidepressant help fight cancer itself?

Dr Dan Peer of the Department of Cell Research and Immunology at Tel Aviv University is proving that it can. A study he and his colleagues recently completed validates that fluoxetine dramatically enhances the effectiveness of a widely used anti-cancer drug.

"The good news is that the medical community won't have to wait - Prozac can be used for this purpose right away," says Dr Peer, noting that doctors already prescribe it to treat depression in chemotherapy patients.

"Prozac is a very interesting non-specific blocker of cancer resistance," says Dr Peer, whose study focused on colon cancer and the anti-cancer drug doxorubicin.

In their laboratory experiments, the Tel Aviv University scientists found that fluoxetine enhanced doxorubicin's efficacy more than 1,000 percent. Fluoxetine, in effect, worked to block the cancer drug from leaving the interior of the cancer cell and poisoning the healthy non-cancerous cells that surrounded it.

In animal models, a mild doxorubicin-fluoxetine treatment combination slowed down tumor progression significantly. These results suggest that pairing fluoxetine with chemotherapeutic drugs to curb drug resistance warrants further clinical study, says Dr Peer. His research has just been published in Cancer Letters, and his suggestions are now listed as recommendations in the latest version of Cancer Encyclopedia.

"Working with a major drug developer, we have validated Prozac's potential, and now Tel Aviv University can lead a humanitarian effort to save lives around the globe," he says.

Since it is very hard to protect this patent as any clinician can prescribe fluoxetine, it is impossible for Tel Aviv University to commercialize its research, says Dr Peer. Instead, he suggests that researchers join forces internationally to implement retrospective studies of all the types of cancer treatment in which fluoxetine was prescribed. And further clinical experiments to validate the use of fluoxetine with chemotherapy is also needed, he stresses.

"The next step is to take the files of chemo patients and determine whether they received Prozac for their depression," says Dr Peer. "This will streamline the understanding in the scientific community of whether, how and for which cancer-fighting drugs Prozac can be an effective partner. It will also give us invaluable information on how to design new drugs."

Dr Peer's Tel Aviv University lab is also developing several new drug delivery nanotechnologies to bring novel therapeutics into breast, blood, pancreatic and brain cancers. A recent technological breakthrough to reprogram immune cells involved in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease was reported in Science earlier this year and it is the basis of a new platform technology developed in his group.

Source: Argov M, Kashi R, Peer D, Margalit R. Treatment of resistant human colon cancer xenografts by a fluoxetine-doxorubicin combination enhances therapeutic responses comparable to an aggressive bevacizumab regimen. Cancer Lett. 2008; doi:10.1016/j.canlet.2008.09.005 [Abstract]
 

NicNak

Resident Canuck
Administrator
I could see how this could work.

My belief would be since our brains require the boost in mood and calming chemicals, is it possable it is having a calming effect or a stress relief effect on the other parts of our bodies in the short term for Cancer treatment?

With the Cancer patients is could be that their cells are in a "passive" or non-stressed state while taking Prozac and that is why it helps? Slowing down the cells so the Cancer medicine can target the cells easier?
 
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