clipped from article:
Cannabis extract shrinks brain tumours
- 05:00 15 August 2004 by Shaoni Bhattacharya
Cannabis extracts may shrink brain tumours and other cancers by blocking the growth of the blood vessels which feed them, suggests a new study.
An active component of the street drug has previously been shown to improve brain tumours in rats. But now Manuel Guzmán at Complutense University, Spain, and colleagues have demonstrated how the cannabis extracts block a key chemical needed for tumours to sprout blood vessels - a process called angiogenesis.
And for the first time, the team has shown the cannabinoids impede this chemical in people with the most aggressive form of brain cancer - glioblastoma multiforme.
Cristina Blázquez at Complutense University, and one of the team, stresses the results are preliminary. "But it's a good point to start and continue," she told New Scientist.
"The cannabinoid inhibits the angiogenesis response - if a tumour doesn't do angiogenesis, it doesn't grow," she explains. "So if you can improve angiogenesis on one side and kill the tumour cells on the other side, you can try for a therapy for cancer."
"This research provides an important new lead compound for anti-cancer drugs targeting cancer's blood supply," says Richard Sullivan, head of clinical programmes, at Cancer Research UK. [ read more at link]
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