Is Arsenic a Key Ingredient in the Battle Against Cancer?

Despite its toxic reputation, arsenic may play a key role in the battle against cancer.

Arsenic, the weapon of choice for villains in Agatha Christie’s famed mystery novels, turns out to be a key ingredient in a novel way to combat acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), a type of cancer that was, until recently, highly lethal.

Researchers Kun Ping Lu and Xiao Zhen Zhou of Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center discovered that oxidized arsenic, commonly known as arsenic trioxide, can effectively target a master cancer regulator protein called Pin1 when paired with all-trans retinoic acid. The research appears in Nature Communication, published on August 9th. Pin1 is an enzyme that the researchers identified more than 20 years ago, and is highly expressed in 60 to 70 percent of common cancers, in which it promotes cancer-cell growth while simultaneously shutting down cells’ natural tumor-suppressor mechanisms. Lu and Zhou found that the combination of arsenic and retinoic acid (a metabolite of Vitamin A) works by successfully inhibiting cancer-driving pathways. The combination is also effective in battling breast cancer that is not susceptible to hormone therapy (triple negative breast cancer, so-called because its growth is not supported by the hormones estrogen or progesterone, nor by the presence of too many HER2 receptors).

In Chinese traditional medicine, “Arsenic has been used for thousands of years,” said Lu. “Its oxidized form is the active ingredient” for a concoction the Chinese called “magic bullet,” which was used to treat a specific kind of leukemia, APL. And in fact, the arsenic does act like a magic bullet to help cure this type of leukemia, he said. When arsenic trioxide is combined with trans retinoic acid, Lu and Zhou find, APL becomes 95 percent curable. “Arsenic has also been shown to have efficacy against other kinds of cancer like lung and liver cancer,” he said. But treatments for these “have not been approved by the FDA. Arsenic has…a notorious toxicity at high doses, so therefore, people are afraid to use it.”

But previous epidemiological work lends support to Lu and Zhou’s findings. The researchers point to existing data: “In some areas where water was very contaminated with high levels of arsenic, breast cancer mortality overall is reduced by roughly 50 percent,” said Lu. “For people under the age of 70, breast-cancer mortality is reduced by roughly 70 percent.”

 Given the prominent role of the Pin-1 enzyme in the development and growth of many other kinds of cancers, Lu and Zhou believe that their research has exciting implications for treating a wide range of cancers—as long as the taboo around arsenic doesn’t inhibit progress.

Read more articles by: Oset Babür

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