Mesothelioma Help Cancer News

Be There Through All the Seasons for Those Grieving A Loss to Mesothelioma
“Summertime and the living is easy,” as we change from Spring to Summer things start to slow down for most of us. The hurried pace we usually live at slows, and many of us take the time to enjoy the weather, our families and vacations. This is the time of year that most look forward to.
One of the most welcome things about summer is that it allows us time to reflect on things and make memories that will stay with us. For mesothelioma patients and their families, this time of the year can allow some time to reflect on life before the diagnosis, and now, living with mesothelioma.
Recently, we had lunch with the wife of a patient who recently died from malignant pleural mesothelioma. His journey had been around 10 months from diagnosis to death. This time was spent in an intense battle. He had chemo, surgery, multiple admissions, and couple of separate rehab stints. Through the dark days of winter he would often say that he wanted to go home. His journey was an emotional and physical strain on his wife and family. They did all they could for him, including taking him home. He died at home surrounded by his family.
In talking with his wife, it was clear that the long days of summer were not something that she was looking forward to. After months of talking with doctors, nurses and therapists, of constantly being on the go, time is weighing on her mind. She is reliving their journey and trying to adjust to long days and longer nights.
How do you help someone who is grieving? Like mesothelioma, everyone’s grief is their own. It is personal and belongs to the person experiencing it. When trying to help, remember you cannot fix or repair their situation. Listen and be there for the person. It is important to be present, listen, and lend the support that is needed, not what you think is needed.
Remember you never know what a person is going through in their own life. Grief happens all seasons. Reach out a hand to help. In today’s fast paced world, there is no substitution for human interaction and support during a difficult time.

Could Dying Mesothelioma Cells Make The Surviving Cells Fight Harder to Stay Alive?
The goal of treatments, such as chemotherapy and radiation, is to kill off mesothelioma cells to increase the survival for the patients. But researchers report they discovered dying cancer cells communicate to their surviving cells that can then alter their genetic makeup to fight back the drugs. Finding a way to block this cell-to-cell communication is now the target for development of a novel cancer treatment.
Researchers from The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Russia and South Korea looked closer at the status of cells in glioblastoma tumors to determine the relationship dying cells have with their neighboring active cancer cells. They found that cells undergoing apoptosis, or are dying, send signals to adjacent tumor cells that encourages them to become more aggressive and resist treatment, according to a June 21 press release from UAB announcing the findings.
Dying Cells Send Signals to Counterparts
The team used mouse models injected with a combination of apoptotic and “healthy” glioblastoma cells. When viewed in brain scans, the combination showed “much more aggressive tumor growth” and were “more therapy-resistant” than either the “healthy” cancer cells or the dying cells alone.
The researchers determined the dying cells secrete apoptotic extracellular vesicles (apoEVs) that can alter the RNA of the recipient cells which promotes drug resistance and “aggressive migration” of the cancer cells.
“This mechanism thus becomes a possible target for new therapies to treat glioblastoma, a primary brain cancer, and the mechanism may apply to other cancer types as well,” the researchers determined.
Mesothelioma is a rare, aggressive cancer that leaves oncologists and patients with few treatment options. Typically the patients are treated with chemotherapy, that works temporarily, but the insidious cancer often develops a resistance to the therapy rendering it ineffective.
“Clinically, our data may provide the rationale to the molecular targeting of RNA splicing events or specific splicing factors for novel cancer therapies,” said Ichiro Nakano, M.D., Ph.D., academic neurosurgeon at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and leader of the international study. “This may lead to decreased acquisition of therapy resistance, as well as reduction in the migration of cancer cells.”
Although the researchers did not look at mesothelioma cell apoptosis, research into other aggressive, difficult-to-treat cancers can lead to insight into the asbestos-caused cancer. Nearly 3,000 Americans are diagnosed with some form of mesothelioma each year. Survival is often less than one year.
Read the full study in the June 21 issue of Cancer Cell.
Sources:
- June 21 issue of Cancer Cell
https://www.cell.com/cancer-cell/fulltext/S1535-6108(18)30226-5 - The University of Alabama at Birmingham
http://www.uab.edu/news/research/item/9543-dying-cancer-cells-make-remaining-glioblastoma-cells-more-aggressive-and-therapy-resistant

Mesothelioma Nurse Discusses Suicide Prevention Resources
Recently, two very public figures, who looked like they had it all, committed suicide. Those closest to them revealed that they had struggled with their demons for many years. When someone is a celebrity we think we “know” them: we know their work, but we do not know them.
This is a wake-up call for all of us to be more aware of how we and our loved ones are really feeling. Suicide happens because the person wants their overwhelming ‘pain’ to end. According to research, 90% of people who die by suicide have an existing mental illness or substance abuse problem at the time of their death.
Depression and depressive illness are mood disorders of the brain. It is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain, a disruption of the brain’s balance. The two chemicals that are thought to be imbalanced are serotonin and norepinephrine. It is not a weakness, or a character problem. The important thing to note is that depression can be successfully treated.
The number of people who seek treatment for an episode of major depression in the U.S. is only 50% of the total that suffer from depression. According to the National Alliance of Mental Health, 80% to 90% of people who seek treatment for depression are treated successfully using therapy and/or medication.
People diagnosed with cancer have a nearly two-times a higher suicide rate than the general population. Being diagnosed with malignant mesothelioma is a life-altering event. There are treatment options, but the options need to include the whole person. Everyone needs to know that when things are looking hopeless or they are in unbearable physical or emotional pain there is help. The feelings are real, but there are treatments that work.
Not to be forgotten, are the families of patients who are being treated for mesothelioma and those who have lost loved ones from mesothelioma. For them, the pain of the loss coupled with other existing issues might make suicide seem like the only option to stop their pain. It is vital for all to realize there is help available and the help does work!
RESOURCES:
www.Save.org – Suicide Awareness Voices of Education
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255
Local Emergency Rooms can also help find you help.

The Potential of Nanoparticles in Treatment of Mesothelioma Patients
In May, Mesothelioma Help reported that researchers from the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center found a “promising new nanotechnology-based delivery method” for immunotherapy using nanoparticles. Now, another team of researchers report they have found a way to use this microscopic drug delivery system “for diagnostics, therapy, or both” for cancer care.
In the latest research from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT), a team of biophysicists report they engineered a way to cover nanoparticles with biological molecules that allows them to deliver therapy and then examine the effect the drug has on the cancer cells. The particles, for example, can carry properties that can home in on the cancer cells to pinpoint the therapy as well as fluorescent properties to light up the cancer cells for diagnostics.
Using theranostics, the integration of therapeutics and diagnostics, in mesothelioma care is an exciting prospect. Most of the treatments used for mesothelioma, a terminal asbestos-caused cancer, eventually become ineffective, but it may not be discovered until the mesothelioma cancer is no longer treatable. With diagnostic capabilities embedded in the nanoparticles, the effectiveness of the treatment can be monitored as needed.
The researchers developed a “molecular glue” using the barnase-barstar protein pair to hold the therapeutic and diagnostic components together. The success of this research is due to this glue that can bind up to one million times greater than other types, and can bind with antibodies, drugs, fluorescent molecules and targeting agents. When the two proteins are tightly bound they form “a bifunctional compound” with both therapeutic and diagnostic properties, that enables targeted drug delivery.
This type of personalized medicine follows the concept that the cancer’s genetic makeup can be used to tailor a patient’s treatment. Mesothelioma can grow at a different rate and respond to different treatments in each patient, that is why mesothelioma patients need treatment that is aimed at their unique characteristics. By allowing the therapeutic aspect of the nanoparticles to be modified, this personalized care optimizes the potential for success of the treatment.
“The demonstrated capabilities show this method to be a promising alternative to commonly used … techniques in nanobiotechnology, theranostics, and clinical applications,” wrote the authors in the study published in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.
Mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer typically affecting the lining of the lungs, is highly aggressive and is resistant to many cancer treatments making it a difficult disease to treat effectively. The prognosis for mesothelioma patients is usually grim: the average survival time varies from 4 – 18 months after diagnosis. Approximately 3,000 Americans are diagnosed with mesothelioma each year.
The paper was published in the April 27 issue of the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

Unplug and Just “Be” With Your Loved Ones
Let’s face it, we all do it. We’re sitting with a friend or family member, and we half-listen to what they’re saying because we’re looking at our phone or other device. Unfortunately, this has become our “new normal.” We rely so much on technology that we sometimes start to “unplug” our real relationships. Phone calls replace visits, text messages replace phone calls… what’s next?
When my Dad was first diagnosed with mesothelioma, I didn’t even have a smart phone. To log on to social media, I had to sit down at a computer. This, in terms of technology, feels like it was such a simpler time. By the time Dad was in the hospital for the final time, I had just gotten my first iPad. I remember sitting in the hospital with him while he slept, using it to play a game. I was very in tune to the fact that Dad needed me, and that he needed me to be truly present with him, so I was actually quite good about putting my device down when he was awake. I knew it was important for both of us.
Please try to remember that people, not technology, need you. When someone you care about is with you, no matter their physical condition, do your best to unplug. Make real memories; they are what will be with you for the long haul. No amount of “likes” can take the place of having a real moment with your loved one. I would give up my phone, computer, everything… if I had the chance to make one more memory with my Dad.
Keep this in mind as you are moving forward. No amount of technology, no matter how life-like it may seem, can replace the company of your loved ones!
Free Mesothelioma Patient & Treatment Guide
We’d like to offer you our in-depth guide, “A Patient’s Guide to Mesothelioma,” absolutely free of charge.
It contains a wealth of information and resources to help you better understand the condition, choose (and afford) appropriate treatment, and exercise your legal right to compensation.
Download Now