Opiate-based Painkillers Encourage Cancer Growth

News Category:

11/20/2009 0 Comments Contact Our News Editors

Although morphine has been the gold-standard treatment for postoperative and chronic cancer pain for two centuries, a growing body of evidence is showing that opiate-based painkillers can stimulate the growth and spread of cancer cells. Two new studies advance that argument and demonstrate how shielding lung cancer cells from opiates reduces cell proliferation, invasion and migration in both cell-culture and mouse models.

The reports--to be presented November 18, 2009, at "Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics," a joint meeting in Boston of the American Association for Cancer Research, the National Cancer Institute, and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer--highlight the mu opiate receptor, where morphine works, as a potential therapeutic target.

News Source: 
University of Chicago Medical Center (2009, November 19). Common pain relief medication may encourage cancer growth. ScienceDaily. Retrieved November 20, 2009, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /re
0
Your rating: None