‘Exploding’ Cells? Swedish Scientists Discover Potential Cancer Treatment for Glioblastoma Multiforme

The Karolinska Institute in Stockholm reverses cancerous cell growth with Vacquinol-1.
exploding cells, exploding paint

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Swedish scientists at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm have been conducting explosive cancer treatment with a new substance called Vacquinol-1. The research team published their findings in Cell last Thursday, which focused specifically on combatting one of the most common but unrelenting forms of brain cancer: glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).

Patrik Ernfors, Karolinska institute, cancer research, cancerous cells

Researcher Patrik Ernfors.
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After a five-day period in which scientists fed Vacquinol-1 to mice with GBM, they found that the substance had increased activity in the cancer cells to the point that they simply “exploded.” “Vacquinols stimulate death by membrane ruffling, cell rounding, massive macropinocytic vacuole accumulation, ATP depletion, and cytoplasmic membrane rupture of [glioblastoma cells],” explained the Karolinska Institute report. Essentially, that means the activity of the mice’s glioblastoma cells was rendered so hyper-active that the cells had no choice but to explode and die. “When cancer cells were filled with a large amount of vacuoles,” says the Institute, “the cell membranes, the outer wall of the cell, collapsed.”

“…the substance had increased activity in the cancer cells to the point that they simply “exploded.””

The average survival time of mice with GBM who didn’t consume Vacquinol-1 was about a month, whereas mice treated with the substance lived up to 80 days.
Those suffering from glioblastoma multiforme are given a relatively short amount of survival time – 15 months, usually – and the potential of Vacquinol-1 to combat cancerous cell growth is an exciting step for those with the terminal illness.

Karolinska Institute, Cancer research

The Karolinska Institute.
(Credit: textbooksandpassports.com)

“Those suffering from glioblastoma multiforme are given a relatively short amount of survival time – 15 months, usually – and the potential of Vacquinol-1 to combat cancerous cell growth is an exciting step for those with the terminal illness.”

“We now want to try to take this discovery in basic research through preclinical development and all the way to the clinic. The goal is to get into a phase 1 trial,” says one of the Institute’s researchers Patrik Ernfors, “This is an entirely new mechanism for cancer treatment. A possible medicine based on this principle would therefore attack the glioblastoma in an entirely new way.”

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