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Study reports complete tumor elimination in pancreatic cancer mouse models

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A new study shows that a combination of drugs can eliminate pancreatic cancer in animal models, pointing to potential new treatment strategies.

Cancer research often feels like a cycle of hope and disappointment. New ideas surface, raise expectations, and then fade as the reality of complex disease sets in.

For patients facing pancreatic cancer, that cycle has been especially cruel. This is why a new study from Spain is being followed so closely by researchers around the world.

A cancer with limited answers

Pancreatic cancer is among the most aggressive and lethal cancers. Fewer than one in ten patients survive more than five years after diagnosis, and current treatments offer limited benefit.

One of the main reasons is a genetic driver called KRAS, which is altered in around 90 percent of pancreatic cancer cases and has long resisted effective targeting.

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At the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), a team led by veteran cancer geneticist Dr. Mariano Barbacid set out to rethink how this gene could be attacked.

Rather than relying on a single drug, the researchers explored whether a coordinated approach could stop the disease from adapting.

Attacking cancer on multiple fronts

The researchers tested a combination of three drugs, each blocking KRAS activity at a different stage.

This multi-layered strategy aimed to prevent tumors from developing resistance, a common failure of earlier treatments.

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In mouse models, the outcome was remarkable. Pancreatic tumors disappeared completely and did not return during the study period.

Just as importantly, the animals did not show serious side effects, suggesting the approach could be tolerable.

What comes next

The results, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, are still confined to laboratory research.

Human trials have not yet begun, and significant challenges remain before clinical use is possible. Even so, the study offers a rare sense of momentum in a field where progress has been painfully slow.

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For pancreatic cancer research, this work signals that long-standing obstacles may finally be giving way.

Sources: Unilad and PNAS

Also read: Night owls may face higher risk of heart disease

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