55KRC: UP-NEXT study tests ovarian cancer treatment
The University of Cincinnati's Amanda Jackson, MD, recently joined 55KRC's Simply Medicine program to discuss the UP-NEXT ovarian cancer clinical trial. Jackson is the site principal investigator at UC for the UP-NEXT trial that is testing a new treatment for a subset of ovarian cancer patients.
"Patients with ovarian cancer, when they initially get chemotherapy, a good percentage of them will go into remission or not have active cancer," said Jackson, University of Cincinnati Cancer Center physician-researcher and associate professor, division chief and vice chair in the UC College of Medicine’s Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology. "But unfortunately a good percentage of those patients’ cancer will come back and be recurrent cancer."
The trial is testing the effectiveness of an antibody-drug conjugate (upifitamab rilsodotin) that is part of a class of therapeutics that have proven to be successful treatments for other types of cancer. The drug works as a kind of Trojan horse, binding to a specific antigen often found on the surface of ovarian cancer cells.
"This study is looking specifically at figuring out medications that we can give to that group of patients after they finish chemo, after we get their cancer to decrease in size, to keep their cancer at bay, to give them a longer period of time before their cancer would come back," she said.
Learn more about the research.
Listen to the Simply Medicine segment. (Note: Segment begins around 3:00 mark of episode.)
Featured photo at top: ovarian cancer tumor in animal model. Photo/National Cancer Institute.
Related Stories
Bono, Chris Tucker Visit UC To Discuss Africa
December 5, 2002
U2's Bono and comedian-actor Chris Tucker led a delegation from the DATA organization who came to UC to talk about potentially catastrophic problems in Africa.
New Year's Help for Those Looking to Kick the Habit
December 20, 2002
Quitting smoking consistently ranks among the top three resolutions made by New Year's resolvers each year.
E-BRIEF: Let's Toast to a Healthier 2003
January 8, 2003
The New Year often means a new health kick: Vows to tone up and trim down, and maybe going to the doctor and getting ourselves as regularly "maintenanced" as we do our cars. So, this week's University of Cincinnati e-briefing examines the health concerns of the young and old, and what you should be doing to preserve your good health.