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New Treatment Offers Hope for Children and Adults With Aggressive Leukemia

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Researchers at the University of Cambridge have developed a potential new therapy for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), the most common childhood cancer. In lab models, it showed powerful effects — targeting cancer cells while potentially reducing the harsh side effects of chemotherapy.

A New Twist on Two Existing Drugs

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The treatment uses two oral drugs — venetoclax and inobrodib — in a unique combination that attacks leukemia cells in tandem.

What Is B-ALL?

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B-ALL is an aggressive blood cancer caused by immature B-cells that crowd the bone marrow and disrupt the production of healthy blood cells.

Chemotherapy Works, But at a High Cost

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Standard treatment spans over two years and brings intense side effects like hair loss, infections, nerve damage, and long-term health risks.

Older Patients Face Worse Outcomes

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While young children respond well to treatment, teenagers and adults often have lower survival rates and endure more complications.

Venetoclax Alone Isn’t Enough

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This drug targets a key protein (BCL2) in leukemia cells, triggering cell death — but many B-ALL cases resist this approach on its own.

Inobrodib Changes the Game

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Inobrodib turns off a gene called CREBBP, which rewires how leukemia cells use fat — making them more vulnerable to treatment.

Dual Attack on Leukemia Cells

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The drug duo induces a unique kind of cell death called ferroptosis — destroying cells by damaging the fat layers in their membranes.

Works Even on Resistant Cells

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The treatment showed success even against B-ALL cells that had previously been resistant to standard therapies.

Proven Safety in Other Trials

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Both drugs have already been tested together in early-stage clinical trials for a different leukemia type, with promising safety data.

Clinical Trials on the Horizon

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Cambridge researchers hope to begin trials in teens and adults soon, aiming to offer a gentler, more targeted alternative to chemotherapy.

Article Based on Information From Eurekalert

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