A COMMON anti-inflammatory could reduce the debilitating side effects of chemotherapy.
A discovery by University of Queensland pain researchers may allow some future cancer patients, including children with leukaemia, to avoid their chemotherapy's worst and most debilitating side effects.
Irina Vetter and Hana Starobova thought "turning off" the inflammation that is one of the body's natural reactions to the chemotherapy drug vincristine might reduce its accompanying pain and unpleasant symptoms.
"We found the anti-inflammatory drug anakinra substantially reduced the awful nerve symptoms for which vincristine chemotherapy is known," Professor Vetter said.
"Importantly, it did not reduce the effectiveness of the chemo."
Anakinra is an existing rheumatoid and juvenile arthritis treatment. Researchers plan to test it soon on human chemotherapy patients taking vincristine.
"Vincristine is used to treat cervical, brain and lung cancers, leukaemia and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas," Professor Vetter said.
She said the finding was specific to vincristine and anakinra, although early findings suggested anakinra may help relieve symptoms of some other chemotherapy drugs.
"Unfortunately chemo's side effects are sometimes so terrible that people interrupt their treatment or end it, putting them at risk of succumbing to their cancer," Professor Vetter said.
"Reducing the chemo's unpleasant symptoms ultimately will save lives and a lot of patient suffering."
The Kids' Cancer Project part-funded the research and the charity's chief executive, Owen Finegan, said the researchers' choice to test a known and approved drug meant relatively fast translation to clinical use.
"This discovery will flow through to patients much more quickly than if the researchers had developed a completely new drug," he said.
"This is likely to bring better treatment for kids with cancers including acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, sarcoma, medulloblastoma and neuroblastoma.
"We are delighted that these findings - initiated to help children - will also benefit adults."
The researchers made the discovery while studying how vincristine causes sensory nerves to function abnormally.
Claire Bermingham of Lennox Head said her son Archer, 4, still suffered from his 2019 vincristine treatment for leukaemia and doctors estimated the side-effects would last eight years.
"Archer has peripheral neuropathy, foot drag, headaches, jaw pain and occasional raspy voice," Mrs Bermingham said.
"He can't take stairs, hold a pen, write his name, use scissors or do lots of other things children his age can do.
"People think once treatment is over and the cancer is in remission, that it's all over - that's not the reality."
Mrs Bermingham said she was delighted to hear about the discovery at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience.
"It's great that researchers are prioritising kinder, gentler cancer treatments for children," she said.
Professor Vetter said inflammation was a natural response in the body to injury or infection, but unchecked it could cause its own issues.