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Skin Cancer Drug may Slow Age-Related Deaths

 

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Scientist  have found that a drug used to treat skin cancer may slow the onset of age-related deaths by slowing the aging process in fruit flies. The study was printed in the journal Cell.

The drug targets a specific cellular process - the effects of a protein called Ras - that occurs in animals, including humans, delaying the onset of age-related deaths by slowing the aging process.  Adult fruit flies given the drug Trametinib live 12% longer than average, the results showed. In the study, the researchers found that the flies exposed continuously to the drug from an earlier stage in life lived longer than those who began dosing later in life, possibly indicating a cumulative effect of the drug

The researchers said the result is "a significant step on the way to developing treatments that delay the onset of aging in humans within the next 10 years".

"We were able to extend their lifespan both genetically and by using a cancer drug to target the Ras pathway which provides us with the first evidence for the anti-aging potential of drugs developed to dampen this pathway," said study co-first author Dr Nazif Alic from University College London (UCL).

Co-first author Cathy Slack from UCL Institute of Healthy Aging, said "Identifying the importance of the Ras-Erk-ETS pathway in animal aging is a significant step on the way to developing treatments that delay the onset of aging," . He also stated "The pathway is the same in humans as it is in flies and because the Ras protein plays a key role in cancer, many small molecule drugs already exist, some of which have been approved for clinical use,"

"Death still seems to be inevitable, but we now have evidence to suggest it is possible to develop pharmacological treatments to keep us healthier for longer," principal examiner professor Dame Linda Partridge from UCL said.


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