Cancer treatments affect brain, heart tissues in children

When exposed to cancer treatment like chemotherapy and radiation, brain and heart tissues in very young children are more prone to apoptosis or programmed cell death, researchers said.

Apoptosis, in which molecular signals order cells to self-destruct, plays an important role in deciding the “fate” of a developing cell.

These toxic treatment stressors put young children at high risk for developing severe, long-lasting impairments in their brain, heart, the study said.

But active apoptosis in the early brain “also sets the stage for extremely high sensitivity to any type of damage or stress, especially that induced by radiation or chemotherapy,” said lead author Kristopher A. Sarosiek, Assistant Professor at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health.

While some cancer cells die through apoptosis, some escape the death orders by activating “pro-survival” signals.

Anthony Letai from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Massachusetts, developed a test called BH3 profiling that can measure inside any cell the relative dominance of pro-survival or pro-death signals.

A cancer cell in which apoptotic death signals are dominant, is said to be “highly primed” or ready for self-destruction and therefore easily killed by therapy, while a cell with low priming is more resistant to death or damage, reports internet.