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Scientists can also read the results of the PT
assay instantly, whereas other methods take hours or days. Dr.
Zharov and his colleagues are the only scientists in the world
using the PT technique.
The grant from NCI, a division of the National
Institutes of Health in Washington, D.C., is for a two-year
research project, which will run through April 2005. Dr. Zharov
also has a $296,000 grant for the project from the National
Science Foundation.
The goal of the
first phase of the study is to see how cells respond to laser
radiation, using existing cell lines to compare the responses of
cancer cells to healthy cells. Dr. Zharov’s hypothesis is that
light-absorbing molecules within the cells, called chromophores,
might be targets of various kinds of drug toxicity and thus
serve as natural drug action indicators. In the next phase he
will study their particular responses to specific drugs. The
ultimate goal is to learn enough about specific responses to
optimize new drug treatments.
“In cancer
treatment it’s very important to kill as many of the cancer
cells as possible, and diminish the damage to healthy cells
surrounding the cancer cells,” Dr. Zharov said. “That’s why we
think our assay can be used for optimization of treatment for
individual patients. It’s a very fast, very sensitive assay,
which may allow us to predict an individual patient’s response
to chemotherapy and perhaps radiation therapy.”
Dr. Zharov, who
came to UAMS in 2000 from the Bauman Moscow (Russia) State
University of Technology, has spent more than 25 years
researching biomedical applications for laser techniques. He is
also currently working on a laser treatment he invented for
treatment of lymphedema, a type of swelling of the extremities
that afflicts some patients with cancer.
Links on This Page
UAMS
Scientists Foresees:
http://www.uams.edu/today/2003/030603/lymphedema.htm
Arkansas Cancer Research Center:
http://www.acrc.uams.edu/
UAMS Reports Gene Profiling:
http://www.uams.edu/today/2003/013003/myeloma_treatment.htm
UAMS Researchers Find:
http://www.uams.edu/today/2002/110702/tamoxifen.htm
© 2003 University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences (UAMS). A single copy of these materials may be
reprinted for noncommercial personal use only. “UAMS,” “UAMS
Online,” “UAMS Today,” “UAMS Update,” “uams.edu,” and “Here’s to
Your Health” are marks of UAMS.
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