Scientists find breakthrough, rev up immune system to help women with ‘Angelina Jolie’ cancer genes avoid mastectomies.

A drug breakthrough could help women with the Angelina Jolie cancer gene avoid surgery.

Currently, women who carry a BRCA gene mutation are at higher risk of breast and ovarian cancer.

Many opt for preventative treatment options such as a mastectomy.

But new research indicates that giving drugs usually administered in the late stages of breast cancer to healthy people carrying the mutated BRCA genes could prevent them from developing the disease.

In 2013, Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie revealed she had made the decision to undergo a double mastectomy after testing positive for mutations in the BRCA1 gene

University of Cambridge academics discovered immune cells in the breast tissue of healthy women carrying faulty BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes showed signs of ‘exhaustion’.

This malfunction – usually found in late-stage tumours – suggests the immune cells cannot clear damaged cells, which eventually lead to cancer.

Senior author Professor Walid Khaled said immunotherapy drugs which overcome this block in function already exist.

He said: ‘We’re very excited about this discovery because it opens up potential for a preventative treatment other than surgery for carriers of BRCA breast cancer gene mutations.

‘Drugs already exist that can overcome this block in immune cell function but so far they’ve only been approved for late-stage disease.’

Immunotherapy helps the immune system recognise and fight cancer. It can be administered on its own or alongside other treatments.

‘No-one has really considered using them in a preventative way before,’ Professor Khaled added.

‘However, these drugs do have serious side effects and we are working now on testing these in pre-clinical models to determine a safe dosage before moving to human studies.’

About one in every 400 people carry the faulty BRCA genes.

According to the NHS out of 100 women with a BRCA1 gene mutation, between 65 and 85 will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. Between 40 and 63 will develop ovarian cancer.

Out of 100 women with the BRCA2 mutation, between 40 and 85 will develop breast cancer at some point in their life.

In some cases, patients with the faulty genes may be offered risk-reducing surgery, which removes tissue such as breasts or ovaries, that could become cancerous.

In 2013, Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie revealed she had made the decision to undergo a double mastectomy after testing positive for mutations in the BRCA1 gene.

Cancer Research UK has granted the Cambridge team a Biology to Prevention Award to test the method in mice and will closely monitor side effects and dosage.

After this, a pilot clinical trial could be carried out in women with BRCA gene mutations.

Professor Khaled added: ‘The best way to prevent breast cancer is to really understand how it develops in the first place. Then we can identify these early changes and intervene.

‘Late-stage breast cancer tends to be very unpredictable and hard to manage.

‘As we make better and better drugs, the tumours just seem to find a way around it.’

Dr Simon Vincent, director of research, support and influencing at Breast Cancer Now, said: ‘The best weapon we could have against breast cancer is the ability to stop it occurring in the first place.

‘This research, which used tissue samples from Breast Cancer Now’s Tissue Bank, suggests that we could prevent some women with altered genes from developing the disease by using drugs currently approved for treatment in the late stages of breast cancer.

‘While further research is needed and clinical trials in humans are yet to take place, these findings could be a significant step forward in our care and treatment of people whose genes mean they have an increased risk of developing breast cancer.’

The discovery was published in the journal Nature Genetics.

Source:https://www.dailymail.co.uk