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New dimension towards development of novel therapies for chronic sinusitis

Written by admin on January 25, 2010 – 7:05 am

New dimension towards development of novel therapies for chronic sinusitisA protein, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which is necessary for normal growth of blood vessel, has been found to be responsible for the cell overgrowth in polyps’ development characterizing one of the most severe forms of sinusitis. This finding was revealed by a study by researchers from the John Hopkins.

This type of sinusitis is not subtle in nature, as per Jean Kim, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor in the Departments of Otolaryngology and Allergy and Clinical Immunology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and a researcher at the Johns Hopkins Allergy and Asthma Center at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.

From News-Medical.Net:

Kim explains that surgery to remove the polyps is one of the most common treatments for this disease. However, nasal and sinus polyps in these patients almost always regrow. “Once the patient has entered the cycle of growing polyps, it’s very hard to get out,” she says. Another common treatment is oral steroids, but these drugs are fraught with many harmful side effects and also only temporarily treat the disease.

She and her Johns Hopkins colleagues have long studied sinusitis, often growing sinus cells isolated from patients in petri dishes. After noticing that cells from patients with polyps typically multiplied faster than cells from normal patients, the researchers speculated that cells from polyp patients might be producing extra amounts of some type of growth factor, a protein that encourages cell growth.

To identify which growth factor might be to blame, the researchers had sinusitis patients with and without polyps rinse their sinus passages with a wash solution, then tested the runoff for the presence of various growth factors. They found that solution from patients with polyps contained high amounts of a substance called vascular endothelial growth factor, or VEGF, a protein important for normal blood vessel growth that also seems to play a key role in a variety of diseases, including cancer. The more VEGF they found in a cell culture, the faster those cells grew.

The findings appeared in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine suggested that there could be development of a future treatment option that will make use of a nasal spray with an anti-VEGF agent in it.


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