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    • What is cancer?
    • Types of cancer
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      • Blood cancers
      • Breast cancer
      • Lung cancer
      • Melanoma
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      • View 45 other cancers
    • Coping with a diagnosis
      • Coping with emotions
      • Tests and scans
      • Talking to kids about cancer
      • Cancer and your finances
      • Cancer and work
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      • Treatment options
      • Chemotherapy
      • Radiation therapy
      • Surgery
      • Immunotherapy
      • Targeted therapy
      • Hormone therapy
      • Clinical trials
      • Palliative treatment
    • Managing side effects
      • Fatigue
      • Taste and smell changes
      • Hair loss
      • Pain and cancer
      • Peripheral neuropathy
      • Changes in thinking and memory
      • Lymphoedema
      • Mouth health
      • Nutrition and cancer
      • Breast prostheses and reconstruction
      • Fertility
      • Sexuality
    • Supporting someone with cancer
      • Caring for someone with cancer
      • Caring for someone with advanced cancer
      • Family and friends
      • Supportive schools
      • Supportive workplaces
      • Caring for mob with cancer
    • Living well during and after treatment
      • Nutrition and cancer
      • Exercise and cancer
      • Complementary therapies
      • Living well after treatment
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      • Living with advanced cancer
      • Caring for someone with advanced cancer
      • Palliative care
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      • Coping with grief
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      • Resources in different languages
      • Resources for LGBTQI+ people
    • Fact sheets, podcasts and more
      • Cancer resource hub – fact sheets, booklets and more
      • Cancer Council Podcasts
  • Get Support
    Our cancer helpline consultants are ready for your call to support all people impacted by cancer. We may be able to assist with direct support services or by putting you in touch with other people who can support you.
    • 13 11 20 – Speak to a cancer professional
    • How can we help you
      • Accommodation during treatment
      • Cancer Counselling
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    • Coping with a diagnosis
      • Coping with emotions
      • Talking to kids about cancer
      • Cancer and your finances
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    • Cancer stories
    • Cancer podcasts
    • Meditation and relaxation podcasts
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    Discover lifestyle choices to minimise your risk of getting cancer and the importance of screening and early detection for cancer survival.
    • Healthy diet and exercise
      • Limit alcohol
      • Be a healthy weight
      • Move more, sit less
      • Healthy Made Tasty
      • Our Kids Our Call
    • Quit smoking and vaping
      • Quit smoking
      • Tackling Tobacco
      • Smoke free environments
      • Electronic cigarettes
      • Generation Vape
    • Sun protection
      • Slip on a shirt
      • Slop on sunscreen
      • Slap on a hat
      • Seek shade
      • Slide on sunglasses
      • SunSmart NSW website
      • Improve your long game
      • Outdoor workers
      • Sporting groups
      • Buy sun protection products online
    • Screening and early detection
      • Cervical screening
      • Bowel cancer screening
      • Breast cancer screening
      • Lung cancer screening
      • Testicular cancer
      • Prostate cancer
      • Ovarian cancer
      • Liver cancer and hepatitis B
      • Check for skin cancer
    • CanAct – campaigning for better policies
    • Cancer Council shops
  • Research
    Research programs save lives, improve treatments and quality of life for cancer survivors.
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      • Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea
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  • Stopping the spread of malignant brain tumours

Stopping the spread of malignant brain tumours

The University of Sydney 2014–2016

Dr Megan Chircop and her team have found new compounds that can target the deadliest type of malignant brain tumour, glioblastoma multiforme. Their work has shown that the compounds successfully target and kill cancer cells, preventing them from spreading. This work could form the basis of new brain cancer treatment.

Background

Glioblastoma multiforme is the most common type of malignant brain tumour. It affects about 1,600 Australians each year and is the most common cause of cancer death in 30-40 year olds. Its impact is disproportionately high in comparison to other cancers, as people at that age often have work obligations and young children to look after.

Glioblastomas are highly aggressive tumours, characterised by extensive spread through the surrounding brain tissue. This makes surgical removal difficult and even after chemotherapy the cancer often lingers. Up to 90% of patients experience recurrence due to particular cells that are resistant to current therapies.

The research

Dr Chircop and her team have found compounds, called dynII inhibitors, that can successfully target glioblastoma tumours. These promising molecules could be developed into a new type of brain cancer drug that is 10 times more effective than currently available treatments.

  • The compounds have already been shown to reduce glioblastoma tumour size in mice by more than 75%.
  • Dr Chircop’s team found the compounds are more potent at killing glioblastoma cells than current available treatments, especially those cells that make the tumours resistant to therapy.
  • The compounds are also able to block the invasion of cancer cells in the brain.
  • The results are promising and the research team is now working to advance its research of the compounds so that ultimately they can be tested in clinical trials with cancer patients.

The impact

Despite medical advances over the past 25 years, glioblastoma remains notoriously difficult to treat, and there are no dedicated drugs that can target it specifically. The research team has been the first to identify new compounds that can reduce glioblastoma growth. Knowledge on how the compounds work on brain cancer cells will let researchers identify which patients would benefit from the new treatment based on the specifics of their tumour.

This will allow for personalised treatment, ultimately extending and improving the quality of life of brain cancer patients. In addition, the researchers believe that targeting cancer cell division with the newly identified compounds could prove to be a useful strategy in other types of tumours.

Research team

Dr Megan Chircop
The University of Sydney

Professor Adam McCluskey
Dr Nigel Charles Jones
Dr Jennette Sakoff
Dr Giovanna D’Abaco

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