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SA researchers in national team to find and destroy dormant cancer

Sneaky blood cancer cells hiding dormant in bone marrow will be the target of a $600,000, three-year national study involving SA researchers.

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South Australian researchers are part of a national team trying to attack dormant blood cancer cells hiding in bone marrow, potentially revolutionising diagnosis and treatment for thousands of patients.

“If we can target and eliminate the dormant cells, we will be in a position to eliminate the disease,” said Professor Andrew Zannettino, from the University of Adelaide and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute.

He is about to embark on a three year myeloma study after receiving a $600,000 grant from the Leukaemia Foundation.

The Strategic Ecosystem Research Partnership grant, announced today, will see Professor Zannettino work with experts from Sydney’s Garvan Institute and Brisbane’s QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute to detect the presence of a group of dormant cancer cells through blood tests.

Prof Zannettino said these dormant cells lay asleep, buried deep in bone marrow and reactivated and multiplied, spreading across the body and attacking bones, turning them into “Swiss cheese”.

Myeloma patient Ann Bruce with University of Adelaide professor Andrew Zannettino, who is a Blue Lantern Ambassador for the Leukaemia Foundation’s Light the Night event. Picture: Tricia Watkinson
Myeloma patient Ann Bruce with University of Adelaide professor Andrew Zannettino, who is a Blue Lantern Ambassador for the Leukaemia Foundation’s Light the Night event. Picture: Tricia Watkinson

He said the researchers were hoping to use biomarkers in blood to identify these dormant cells and determine whether they were at risk of reactivating.

This discovery could pave the way for drug therapies to attack the dormant cells, keeping them at bay or destroying them completely.

Myeloma is a blood cancer that can return several times after treatment and becomes resistant to therapy over time.

Cases in Australia have increased 35 per cent since 2009.

The disease kills about 1000 patients each year

Adelaide mum Ann Bruce has undergone stem cell transplant, three rounds of radiation therapy and trialled three different chemotherapy drugs over the past 20 years after tumours and lesions repeatedly appeared in her bones.

“It’s always there in the back of your mind,” said the 64-year-old from North Haven.

“It’s a cancer that can come back at any time, very fast and it can be really hard to control.

“It never gives you a rest.”

Professor Zannettino is a Blue Lantern Ambassador for the Leukaemia Foundation’s annual Light the Night event in Adelaide on October 11.

Registrations are now open at www.lightthenight.org

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Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-australia/sa-researchers-in-national-team-to-find-and-destroy-dormant-cancer/news-story/3d85681e1cf51d0169829d56967fc1f6