Research finds cancer drug also lowers blood glucose

Washington:  According to new research from Mayo Clinic and the University Of Connecticut School Of Medicine, dasatinib, a drug commonly used to treat certain types of leukaemia, may have antidiabetic effects comparable to medications used to treat diabetes, and with more research, could become a novel therapy for diabetic patients.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings, a peer-reviewed medical publication, published the report.
Dasatinib is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is used to treat tumours, cancerous tissue, and chronic myelogenous leukaemia.

Researchers wanted to know if dasatinib also has antidiabetic properties for older patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.Using a Mayo Clinic database with more than 9 million case histories spanning 25 years, they determined it may have an anti-diabetic effect comparable to or perhaps greater than current medications used to treat type 2 diabetes.

Dasatinib is a senolytic drug, a type of agent first identified at Mayo Clinic that in animal studies targets senescent cells.

These cells accumulate in many tissues with aging and at sites of pathology in chronic diseases, and in animal studies, senolytic drugs appear to delay, prevent or alleviate age-related changes, chronic diseases, and geriatric syndromes.

Our findings suggest that dasatinib or related senolytic drugs may become diabetic therapies, more study is needed to determine whether these findings also are observed in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus but without underlying malignant disease,” says Robert Pignolo, MD, PhD, the study’ssenior author.

Researchers used Mayo Clinic’s Informatics for Integrating Biology at the Bedside, a framework that organizes and transforms patient records into a deidentified research database.The retrospective study started with a total of 9.3 million individuals who were screened for use of either dasatinib or imatinib, another tyrosine kinase inhibitor that was approved for the treatment of a type of leukemia in 2001 but with weak senolytic activity.

The records were for Mayo patients from 1994 to 2019. Of those patients, 279 were treated with imatinib and 118 with dasatinib, and after the further screening, a total of 48 patients were included in the study.

The findings show that dasatinib lowers serum glucose in patients with pre-existing type 2 diabetes to a greater degree than imatinib and is comparable to first-line diabetic medications such as metformin and sulfonylureas.

Further study is needed to determine whether the antidiabetic effect of dasatinib is due primarily to its senolytic properties, says Dr Pignolo, director of the Translation and Pharmacology Program at Mayo Clinic’s Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging. If it is, the effectiveness of combining dasatinib with another senolytic drug such as quercetin may be greater than with dasatinib alone.

“This study was really the first proof-of-concept that a senolytic drug may have substantial long-term beneficial effects in humans. According to research in animal models, it is not necessary to give senolytic drugs continuously, and so patients may need only take a drug such as dasatinib every few weeks, reducing possible side effects,” Dr Pignolo says.

The study was supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences; the Robert and Arlene Kogod Professorship in Geriatric Medicine at Mayo Clinic;the National Institute on Aging; the Noaber Foundation Professorship in Aging at Mayo Clinic;the Connor Group; the Robert J. and Theresa W. Ryan Foundation; and the Travelers Chair in Geriatrics and Gerontology at the University of Connecticut Health Center.

 

Medically Speaking

Share
Published by
Medically Speaking

Recent Posts

The Hidden Costs of Excessive Screen Time: How It Impacts Your Child’s Behavior and What You Can Do About It

Explore the profound effects of excessive screen time on your child’s behavior and development. Discover…

4 hours ago

Transform Your Heart Health: Simple Everyday Diet and Lifestyle Changes for a Happier, Stronger Heart

Discover how simple daily changes in your diet and lifestyle can significantly improve your heart…

4 hours ago

“Unraveling the Truth: Do Brain Tumours Only Affect Older Adults? Debunking Myths and Shedding Light on a Complex Condition”

This article explores the common misconception that brain tumours primarily affect older adults, revealing the…

4 hours ago

“Revolutionary Breakthrough: First-Ever Ovarian Cancer Vaccine Set to Transform Women’s Health and Combat a Silent Killer”

The first-ever ovarian cancer vaccine is poised to change the landscape of women's health by…

4 hours ago

“Battling the Monsoon Surge: Essential Strategies to Prevent Dengue and Chikungunya Infections in Delhi”

As dengue and chikungunya cases rise in Delhi during the monsoon season, understanding prevention strategies…

5 hours ago

NATURAL vs CHEMICAL SKINCARE: THE ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO CHOOSING WHAT’S BEST FOR YOUR SKIN

Skincare is a significant concern for women (and increasingly, men), with the quest for perfect,…

5 hours ago