A new compound that blocks growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), called MIA-602, was tested against nine different breast cancer cell lines, including hard-to-treat triple-negative types. MIA-602 reduced cancer cell survival in all nine cell lines regardless of their hormone receptor status, working by shutting down key growth-promoting signaling pathways. This suggests GHRH-blocking drugs could be a potential treatment option even for breast cancers that don't respond to standard hormone therapies.
Pozsgai, Eva; Schally, Andrew V; Hocsak, Eniko; Zarandi, Marta; Rick, Ferenc; Bellyei, Szabolcs