TGTGInsighttelegram intelligenceLIVE / telegram public index
← EverythingScience
EverythingScience avatar

TGINSIGHT POST

Post #5181

@EverythingScience

EverythingScience

Views693Post view count
PostedFeb 702/07/2026, 10:55 AM
Post content

Post content

This Deadly Brain Cancer Currently Has No Cure. Scientists Just Found A Way To Kill It Anew breakthrough in the pathology of glioblastoma – the most common type of brain cancer, currently incurable – has been found, opening up the potential for a future treatment that could be as simple as taking a pill. Each year, more than 14,000 people in the US alone will be diagnosed with glioblastoma, an aggressive, unpredictable, and unpreventable brain cancer. Each one of those new patients will live an average of 12 to 18 more months – without any treatment, it can be much less – and only one in 20 will still be alive after five years. “Glioblastoma is a devastating disease. Essentially no effective therapy exists,” said Hui Li, a researcher in the University of Virginia School of Medicine’s Department of Pathology, in a statement this week. But back in 2020, Hui and his colleagues made a first step towards finding one: they discovered the so-called “oncogene” that triggers the development of glioblastoma. “The novel oncogene we discovered promises to be an Achilles’ heel of glioblastoma,” he said at the time, “with its specific targeting potentially an effective approach for the treatment of the disease.” Now, his team have announced the next stage in the development of a treatment or cure for glioblastoma: the identification of a specific molecule which can block the activity of this oncogene, and which, in mouse studies, was able to destroy glioblastoma cells without affecting healthy tissue. “What’s novel here is that we’re targeting a protein that [glioblastoma] cells uniquely depend on, and we can do it with a small molecule that has clear in vivo activity,” Li explained. “To our knowledge, this pathway hasn’t been therapeutically exploited before.” Source:IFLScience @EverythingScience