By Amy Barrett

Published: Friday, 18 March 2022 at 12:00 am


Researchers have found a way to implant a ‘drug factory’ into mice that bolsters the immune system in its fight against cancer. The team, from Rice University, Houston, USA, say these factories could one day be used to administer drugs to treat other illnesses, like diabetes or even COVID-19.

In their recently published study, the team showed that the implants could eliminate ovarian and colorectal cancer in mice less than one week after they were administered.

The implanted capsules work as a miniature factory, regularly creating and releasing doses of a compound called a cytokine, which is naturally produced in the body to tell the immune system when and where to work.

“We just administer once, but the drug factories keep making the dose every day, where it’s needed until the cancer is eliminated,” said co-author Prof Omid Veiseh, a cancer researcher at Rice University.

“Once we determined how many factories we needed [to implant] we were able to eradicate tumours in 100 per cent of animals with ovarian cancer and in seven of eight animals with colorectal cancer.”