New film highlights the vital role of a scientist in finding kinder treatments for childhood cancer

 

The drug might actually help reawaken the immune system in patients so that we might be able to use the patient’s own immune system to help fight the cancer, and then also have memory of that so the body will remember and it will stop the cancer coming back.

In a film produced by Children with Cancer UK, Dr Zoe Walters, Associate Professor at the University of Southampton, shares how she is leading a team of researchers to find kinder and more effective ways of treating the most common type of soft tissue cancer to occur in children, rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). 

In 2014, Children with Cancer UK funded a fellowship for Dr Walters to research the new use of a drug called an EZH2 inhibitor that is in use for other adult cancers to be used to treat RMS in children. She has identified a protein called EZH2 that is present at abnormally high levels in tumour tissue and is researching to see whether medicating against EZH2 will stop RMS cells from growing and be potentially curative.

Dr Walters explains:

What we’re now starting to realise is that the drug might actually help reawaken the immune system in patients so that we might be able to use the patient’s own immune system to help fight the cancer, and then also have memory of that so the body will remember and it will stop the cancer coming back. And that’s the ultimate hope for this particular drug.

Every year in the UK around 55 children are diagnosed with RMS, a cancer that affects connective tissues such as the muscle. Available treatments have remained largely unchanged for 20 years and although they are effective for some children, can cause long-term side effects that affect their normal development. Treatments with limited long-term side effects are needed so that more children can recover and lead a normal life. 

Children with Cancer UK works closely with scientists and medical experts to help pioneer science and innovation in paediatric cancer research. In 2023, the charity invested over £6 million into vital research, funding 11 new research grants. Dr Walters was one of the charity’s first Research Fellows in 2014 and her research funded by the charity is now published in the Clinical Epigenetics Journal. She talks about the charity’s research grant in the film: “It’s almost indescribable to get this funding. It really was life changing. It was the thing that allowed me to pursue my dream. 

I just want to say a massive thank you to everybody who has done, is thinking about, or is in any way connected with the charity. Without your support, generosity and funding, we wouldn’t be able to do this type of work and we wouldn’t be able to find new, better, less harmful treatments for these patients.

Dr Sultana Choudhry, Head of Research at Children with Cancer UK, said:

Research is integral to driving forward our vision of a world where every child and young person survives a cancer diagnosis. Every day in the UK, 10 children and young people receive a cancer diagnosis and have to face tough treatments often lasting years. Many will have long-term side-effects that may significantly impact their lives forever. By funding much needed research projects such as Dr Walters’, we are able to support the development of kinder treatments so more children will get the chance to grow up and live their life to the fullest.

The Real Stories campaign is a video series produced by Children with Cancer UK that hears from different people involved with childhood cancer.

Watch Zoe Walters’ Real Story film

ENDS 

Press Enquiries: 

For all press enquiries, please contact:  

Notes to Editors: 

Dr Zoe Walters can be available for interviews. 

About Children with Cancer UK: 

Children with Cancer UK is a leading children’s cancer charity dedicated to raising and investing funds into vital specialist research to save the lives of children and young people with cancer. Our mission is to improve survival rates and the quality of survival in young patients, and to find ways to prevent cancer in the future. Whilst working towards this, Children with Cancer UK funds support for children and their families as they navigate treatment. What began as a small memorial charity in 1988, has evolved into a major force raising more than £300 million and investing in over 200 pioneering research projects.  

For more information about Children with Cancer UK, visit www.childrenwithcancer.org.uk   

 

Read other stories

Newsletter icon
Newsletter icon

Sign up to our e-newsletter today

Sign up to our e-newsletter and receive exclusive stories straight to your inbox. You will also find out about our latest childhood cancer research news along with updates on our fundraising events, charity news and opportunities to support us. Don’t miss out!

By signing up to this newsletter I agree to receive general and financial appeal emails from Children with Cancer UK