Scientists team up with York Hospital to study DNA mutations behind blood cancers

Posted on 23 May 2024

Scientists from the University of York are working with doctors and patients at York Hospital to understand the DNA mutations linked to a group of chronic blood cancers, and investigate why, in some cases, they can suddenly become more aggressive.

The researchers, from the newly formed Centre for Blood Research at the University of York, are recruiting participants from York Hospital with myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), a group of blood cancers characterised by the overproduction of red blood cells and/or platelets.

There are around 4,000 cases of MPNs in the UK each year and they most commonly affect people over 60. Often, they remain stable and progress slowly, which means people can live with them for a long time without being very unwell.

However, in a few rare cases, they can transform into more aggressive cancers which need urgent treatment, such as acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), where faulty myeloid cells – which include red blood cells and platelets – build up in the body and stop the blood and immune system from functioning normally.

Valuable insights

Dr Katherine Bridge, from the Department of Biology and Centre for Blood Research at the University of York, said: “We want to better understand the DNA mutations that cause these cancers, and to see whether there are additional factors that cause them to suddenly transform and become more aggressive.

“MPNs behave like the early stages of other blood cancers, offering valuable insights into their progression. Often, these crucial initial stages occur too quickly in other cancers for us to be able to track them effectively. By focusing on MPNs, we have a unique opportunity to scrutinise these early events, potentially uncovering strategies to halt the advancement of more aggressive malignancies.”

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