The Atlantic

How Bacteria Could Protect Tumors From Anticancer Drugs

The success of a treatment might depend on a person’s microbes.
Source: Leore Geller

Cancers have unwitting allies: the healthy cells that surround them. Several groups of scientists have now found that normal cells can inadvertently release substances that shield their malignant neighbors from anticancer drugs. That would explain why even targeted therapies—smart drugs that are meant to hit the specific genetic faults behind various cancers—sometimes stumble right out of the gate. When pitted against isolated cancer cells in laboratory tests, they perform as expected. But when pitted against actual tumors, which enjoy a kind of innate resistance because of the healthy cells around them, the drugs can fail.

But at least half of the cells in the human body are not human.

Every person is a seething colony of microbes—a collection of tens of trillions of from the Weizmann Institute of Science and Todd Golub from Harvard Medical School, have shown that some of these bacteria can also shield tumors from anticancer drugs.

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