A new study has pointed out that only one injection is required to reverse muscle wasting in cancer, if an experimental technique used in mice is found to be successful in humans.
![Muscle Wasting Due to Cancer Reversed During Tests on Mice Muscle Wasting Due to Cancer Reversed During Tests on Mice](https://www.medindia.net/afp/images/Health-disease-cancer-leukaemia-74268.jpg)
Many tumours produce a molecule called activin, which plays a role in muscle breakdown. So Han and his team injected a protein that mops up excess activin, five or 14 days after mice were implanted with a colon tumour.
In both cases, the mice started eating and their body weight returned to normal within two weeks. Mice with gonad tumours responded in a similar way.
The treatment also led to the mice surviving longer. By the time all the untreated mice had died, around 90 per cent of the treated mice were still alive.
"The findings highlight the importance of preserving muscle mass for survival," New Scientist quoted Kate Murphy at the University of Melbourne, as saying.
The study is published in Journal Cell.
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