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Onconase is a new chemotherapy that is being tested for
treatment for mesothelioma. Currently the popular drug used
is Doxorubicin, however Onconase is beginning to increase
in popularity as studies show that Onconase does not produce
the debilitating side effects of Doxorubicin. Onconase works
slowly, but is far less toxic than standard cancer drugs.
There is none of the hair loss, anemia, or nausea normally
associated with chemotherapy. Patients who react positively
to Onconase live longer and have a higher quality of life.
Onconase is a ribonuclease protein derived from the eggs
and embryonic stem cells of a species of leopard frogs.
Onconase slows down cancer cell growth by decaying RNA.
Without certain RNA strands cancer cells cannot make certain
critical proteins and therefore cannot replicate. This slows
down the growth of the tumor. Normally, high doses of chemotherapy
are needed to affect cancer cells. However, Onconase is
able to make cancer cells more susceptible to lower doses
of chemotherapy, and therefore reduce side effects.
Onconase is the first ribonuclease protein drug, and one
of the first embryonic stem cell products to reach the final
stages of testing. Onconase seems effective on 90% of types
of cancers. Because of its novelty its use in fighting mesothelioma
is not well known. As published in the January 1, 2002 issue
of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, clear anti-tumor activity
was seen in 6 of the 81 patients and an additional 35 patients
had cessation of growth in previously growing mesothelioma.
The median survival of the patients who entered the trial
without symptoms from the cancer was 18.5 months. In another
study comparing patients using Onconase to those using Doxorubicin
the median survival times, 1-year, and 2-year survival rates
were 11.3 months vs 9.1 months, 46.2% vs 34.5%, and 34.3%
vs 10.7%, respectively. The investigators concluded that
Onconase is at least as active as Doxorubicin for the treatment
of MM and may be more active in certain patient subsets.
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