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AAP
AAP
Health
Tim Dornin

SA scientists in major leukaemia advance

SA scientists have made a breakthrough in the search for treatments for a deadly blood cancer. (AAP)

South Australian scientists have made a significant advance in overcoming drug resistance among patients with acute myeloid leukaemia, a rare blood cancer that kills most sufferers within a few years.

Researchers from the University of South Australia and SA Pathology's Centre for Cancer Biology have discovered a way to suppress a specific protein that promotes resistance to drugs commonly used to treat AML patients.

One of the lead authors, Stuart Pitson, said the finding could revolutionise the treatment of AML, a disease that recently claimed the lives of SA football great Russell Ebert and professional golfer Jarrod Lyle.

"Each year in Australia, around 900 people are diagnosed with AML, a cancer of the blood and bone marrow characterised by an overproduction of cancerous white blood cells called leukaemic blasts," Professor Pitson said.

"These cells crowd out normal white blood cells, which then can't do their usual infection-fighting work, thereby increasing the risk of infections, low oxygen levels and bleeding."

SA Pathology haematologist David Ross said many AML patients initially responded to Venetoclax, a new therapy recently listed on the PBS, but over time AML cells became resistant.

Using a large biobank of patient-donated AML biopsies and world-leading advanced pre-clinical models, the researchers demonstrated that by regulating lipid metabolism in the body, a protein called Mcl-1, the protein that facilitates drug resistance, was inhibited in AML cells.

"This process makes AML cells exquisitely sensitive to Venetoclax while leaving the normal white blood cells unaffected," SA Pathology researcher Jason Powell said.

The team is now working to optimise drugs targeting this pathway to take into clinical trials for AML patients.

Prof Ross said for most people with AML, the chances of long-term survival were no better now than they were last century.

"Now, we have a chance to remedy that," he said.

"New treatments that prevent Venetoclax resistance have the potential to prolong survival, or even increase the chances of a cure in a disease for which improved outcomes are desperately needed."

The SA research has been published in the haematology journal Blood.

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