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  Anticancer drug - highlighting tumor cells in MRI images + antibody Herceptin to shrink tumor.
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donpat@donpatent.com  
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 More options Nov 18 2007, 8:46 am
From: "don...@donpatent.com" <donpat...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 18 Nov 2007 05:46:09 -0800 (PST)
Local: Sun, Nov 18 2007 8:46 am
Subject: Anticancer drug - highlighting tumor cells in MRI images + antibody Herceptin to shrink tumor.
1-18-2007 17:53

Smart Drug Developed to Show, Treat Cancer

Yonsei University's nano-drug team poses for a photo on Thursday. From
left: medical professors Hur Yong-min and Suh Jin-suck, and chemical
engineering professor Haam Seung-joo. / Courtesy of Ministry of
Science and Technology

By Cho Jin-seo
Staff Reporter

A team of Yonsei University researchers have developed an anticancer
drug that not only treats cancer but also diagnoses the disease by
highlighting tumor cells in MRI images.

The researchers - chemical engineering professor Haam Seung-joo and
medical professors Suh Jin-suck and Hur Yong-min - said that the
``multi-purpose nano compound'' has proven to be effective in animal
tests, and clinical tests will begin soon. They said that they are in
a partnership with ATGen, a biomedical venture firm, to commercialize
the drug.

The encapsulated ``smart'' drug is tens to hundreds of nanometers in
size, allowing particles to penetrate deep into tissues and bind to
specific cancer cells. As the particles contain a magnetic component,
they are shown highlighted by MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) along
with the cells to which they are attached.

The tiny capsules also carry a tumor antibody called Herceptin. In
mouse test, cancer cells treated with this nano-drug shrank to one
sixth the size of cancer cells left untreated, the Yonsei team said.

``Like a high-precision guided missile, the nano-compound can bind to
cancer cells in the human body and slowly release the anticancer
drug,'' the team said in a press release on Friday. `` It enables
visual monitoring of the condition of cancer cells as well.''

The team has been studying the search-and-destroy technique for years
and has filed several patents in the United States and in South Korea.
Other scientists, including researchers at the Gwangju Institute of
Science and Technology and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
have been conducting similar projects.

indi...@koreatimes.co.kr

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/tech/2007/11/133_13943.html


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