European study finds drug effective in treatment of mesothelioma
European study finds drug effective in treatment of mesothelioma
Reuters reports that the COX-2 inhibitor Celebrex, usually prescribed for arthritis, has a marked effect on the asbestos-related cancer malignant mesothelioma in lab and animal experiments, according to a report from Italy.
Highlights of the report included:
Current treatments for mesothelioma have failed to alter its dismal prognosis, the authors comment in the International Journal of Cancer, but one selective COX-2 inhibitor has been shown to stop mesothelioma cells growing in a lab dish.
This prompted Dr. Alfonso Catalano at the University of Marche in Ancona and colleagues to assess the effects of Celebrex (a.k.a. celecoxib) on experimental mesothelioma.
Celecoxib and similar compounds all inhibited proliferation of a mesothelioma cell line without inhibiting the growth of a normal mesothelial cell line, the researchers report. Celecoxib was the most effective of the agents tested.
“These results provide the first evidence that celecoxib is effective for the prevention and regression of malignant mesothelioma cells in experimental models … and strongly support ongoing clinical trials in malignant mesothelioma patients,” the team concludes.