Anti-VPAC
Fighting chemotherapy side
effects
Thrombocytopenia, which is the
reduced number of platelets
in blood, is a common severe
side-effect of chemotherapy in
cancer patients and increases the
risk of bleeding and severity of
hemorrhage, therefore causing
the delay or even discontinuation
of treatment in these patients.
There is a high medical need to find
a therapeutic that could reduce
thrombocytopenia by accelerating
platelet production. Blood platelet
transfusion, the current standard
of care for this condition, offers
only a temporary solution for these
patients and is associated with
significant cost and risk.
Researchers at the University
of Leuven and ThromboGenics
have developed a novel
therapeutic approach, showing
that the inhibition of VPAC could
stimulate the production of
platelets. ThromboGenics has
now identified and selected a
lead antibody against VPAC to
enter preclinical development.
VPAC is a receptor present at
the surface of bone marrow cells
called megakaryocytes, which,
when mature, produce platelets.
Research published in the official
journal of the American Society
of Hematology (ASH )* describes
how the inhibition of VPAC
could promote megakaryocyte
differentiation.
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