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Suppressing Platelet Activation to Reduce Cancer (SPARC): A New Approach to Cancer Prevention

Progetto
Pre-clinical, epidemiological and randomised evidence show that once daily low-dose aspirin (75-100mg) prevents cancer, but the underlying mechanism(s) are not understood. Consequently, aspirin for cancer prevention has mainly been evaluated in unselected populations with limited information to guide decisions on dose, duration of treatment, relevance of previous aspirin exposure, or types of cancer to target (anatomically or molecularly.) Daily low-dose aspirin inhibits thromboxane (TX)A2-dependent platelet activation by permanently inactivating cyclooxygenase (COX1). We have demonstrated: i) the role of platelet COX1 in early carcinogenesis using pPtgs1-/- mice ii) that TXA2 limits T-cell immunity to cancer metastasis by activating the immunosuppressive functions of a guanine exchange factor, Arhgef1 in T-cells; iii) persistently increased TXA2-dependent platelet activation (reflected by urinary 11-dehydro-TXB2 (U-TXM)) in recently diagnosed cancer patients and iv) aspirin reduces the highly immunogenic Lynch syndrome cancers and is recommended in NICE guidelines. Together these results suggest that the anticancer effects of aspirin are mediated through suppression of platelet activation and modulated by the immune system. Aims: i) to provide further mechanistic insights into how aspirin (and potentially other anti-platelet) drugs prevent cancer ii) to investigate the potential of U-TXM to identify and monitor individuals likely to benefit from aspirin and iii) to utilise the mechanistic knowledge to aid the interpretation of accumulating clinical trial data, specifically to investigate the relationship between tumour immunogenicity and aspirin response, and develop a precision medicine/patient centric approach to employing aspirin for cancer prevention.
  • Dati Generali
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Dati Generali

Partecipanti (2)

PATRIGNANI Paola   Responsabile scientifico  
TACCONELLI Stefania   Partecipante  

Dipartimenti coinvolti

DIPARTIMENTO DI NEUROSCIENZE, IMAGING E SCIENZE CLINICHE   Principale  

Tipo

Programmi di altri enti pubblici o privati europei

Finanziatore

QUEEN MARY UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
Ente Finanziatore

Capofila

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON

Partner

Università degli Studi G.D'Annunzio di CHIETI

Contributo Totale (assegnato) Ateneo (EURO)

434.701,8€

Ricerca

Settori (3)


LS4_12 - Cancer - (2024)

LS7_7 - Pharmacology and toxicology - (2024)

Settore BIOS-11/A - Farmacologia

Parole chiave libere (5)

  • ascendente
  • decrescente
Clopidrogel
Colorectal cancer
Lynch syndrome
aspirin
cancer prevention
No Results Found
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