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There is always research going on in the area of
mesothelioma. Scientists are looking for causes
and ways to prevent mesothelioma. Doctors are working
to improve accuracy of diagnosis and effectiveness
of treatment. Despite recent progress, much remains
to be learned about the best way to treat these
cancers.
Causes and prevention
Much of the research on mesothelioma has focused on learning exactly how
asbestos changes mesothelial cells and their DNA to cause these cancers.
Understanding how these fibers produce cancer might help us develop ways to
prevent those changes.
The risk of asbestos in developing of mesothelioma is a definite public
health concern. We are continuously learning more about which fibers can
produce cancer, how they cause these cancers, and what levels of exposure
can be considered safe. Now that we know about the dangers of asbestos, we
can limit or stop exposure in homes, public buildings, and the workplace.
Unfortunately, regulations protecting workers from asbestos exposure are
much less stringent in some countries and nonexistent in others.
Multimodality therapy
Doctors are always learning more about the best
way to treat patients with mesotheliomas. The roles
of surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy
in the treatment of mesothelioma are highly debated.
Treatments that use some combinations of surgery,
radiation therapy, and chemotherapy, called multimodality
therapy, are now being studied and may provide the
most promising option for some patients. New chemotherapy
drugs are currently being tested in clinical trials,
together with other types of treatment.
Gene therapy
A new approach to cancer therapy being tested on mesothelioma is gene therapy.
One gene therapy approach to treating mesothelioma
uses special viruses that have been modified in
the laboratory. The modified virus is injected into
the pleural space and infects the mesothelioma cells.
When this infection occurs, the virus injects a
gene into the mesothelioma that makes the cancer
very sensitive to a drug that would otherwise not
harm the cancer.
Immunotherapy
Treatments that boost the immune system's reaction to fight mesothelioma
more effectively are being tested in clinical trials. Some of these
treatments use interferons or interleukins, hormone-like substances that
activate the immune system. |