Gene drug could help erection nerves regrow after prostate cancer surgery, rat study finds

An experimental nerve-growing drug could revolutionise the sex lives of prostate cancer sufferers, scientists say.

Thousands of men diagnosed with the disease require drastic treatment to remove the organ, which sits in the pelvis and is about the size of a ping pong ball. But it can damage nerves that control blood supply to the penis, leaving patients completely unable to get an erection — even using Viagra.

Now researchers believe hope may finally be on the horizon in the form of a drug that enables impotent patients to get erections again. 

A study on rats given similar nerve damage found an over-active gene was slowing down the body’s own ability to heal damaged nerves. 

But a spray-on drug that blocked the gene helped speed it back up in the rodents and brought back their ability to get erections, according to the team of experts in New York. 

The rat study now suggests that the drugs could drastically improve recovery and even get men’s sexual function back to normal. However, it has not yet been tested on humans. 

Many men who require drastic treatment to remove their prostate, which sits in the pelvis and is about the size of a ping pong ball (highlighted in yellow), are left with lifelong problems (stock image)

These microscope images show how damaged nerves grow back more successfully when treated with the gene therapy (right) compared to ones that are left to regrow naturally (left)

These microscope images show how damaged nerves grow back more successfully when treated with the gene therapy (right) compared to ones that are left to regrow naturally (left)

Researchers behind the discovery say 60 per cent of men who have a prostate-removal operation still have erectile dysfunction 18 months later. 

And fewer than one in three can get erections good enough for sex five years down the line.

Nerve graft surgery can improve this but it is a hit-and-miss procedure, and leaving nerves to grow back naturally can take years or never happen at all.

Prostate cancer is the most common form of the disease among British men, making up around one in four cancer cases – around 50,000 per year and 250,000 per year in the US. 

‘Despite so-called nerve-sparing procedures, the surgery can damage the cavernous nerves, which control erectile function by regulating blood flow to the penis,’ said Dr Kelvin Davies, from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

The prostate is a small organ surrounded by other tissues, so surgery to remove it inevitably involves pushing around and disturbing other bits of the body.

Nerves are fragile and pressing on them, pulling them or damaging them with tools like scalpels can affect how well they work. This can lead to numbness or muscle weakness.

The body can heal nerves itself but the Albert Einstein researchers found that one particular gene, named FL2, was slowing this down. 

FL2 was stopping skin cells trying to get to the damaged nerves to help rebuild them. 

Dr Davies and colleagues developed a drug that could block FL2 from working and found this sped up the nerve healing process. 

It was administered using siRNA – ‘small interfering RNA molecules’ that deliver genetic material that disrupt the body’s ability to make FL2.

Prostate cancer is the most common form of the disease among British men, making up around one in four cancer cases – around 50,000 per year

Prostate cancer is the most common form of the disease among British men, making up around one in four cancer cases – around 50,000 per year

Three weeks after being given the anti-FL2 drug the siRNA therapy in a gel which was sprayed onto the nerves, rats had ‘significantly better erectile function’ compared to untreated rats. 

And after a month of the treatment the researchers found the treated rats’ had back-to-normal blood pressure levels in their penises. 

Even rats that had had their nerves completely severed managed to partially regrow them in seven out of eight cases. 

In humans, severed nerves are much less likely to recover, and when they do it can take years. 

Dr David Sharp, the co-leader of the research, said: ‘Erectile dysfunction after radical prostatectomy has a major impact on the lives of many patients and their partners.

‘Since rats are reliable animal models in urologic research, our drug offers real hope of normal sexual function for the tens of thousands of men who undergo this surgery each year.’

Simon Grieveson, head of research funding at Prostate Cancer UK, said: ‘Although this research is only in its very early stages, it suggests a novel way to potentially restore nerve function.

‘If it works, this could one day help men who experience erectile dysfunction as a side effect of surgery. In the meantime, our priority as a charity is to fund research to improve treatments for prostate cancer, curing more men and causing less harm in the process.’  

The researchers also found that using the drug could make it more likely that taking pills like Viagra would work because it increased levels of a chemical that is vital to getting an erection.

Nitric oxide, which causes the penis muscles to relax and allow blood to flow in, was found in higher quantities in rats treated with siRNA.

‘This is important because drugs like Viagra don’t work if there’s no nitric oxide to kick things off,’ said Dr Sharp. 

‘But if we can restore even some of the nitric oxide in these nerves, Viagra and other erectile dysfunction drugs may then be able to exert their effects.’ 

The study was published in the journal JCI Insight.

WHAT IS PROSTATE CANCER?

How many people does it kill? 

More than 11,800 men a year – or one every 45 minutes – are killed by the disease in Britain, compared with about 11,400 women dying of breast cancer.

It means prostate cancer is behind only lung and bowel in terms of how many people it kills in Britain. 

In the US, the disease kills 26,000 men each year.

Despite this, it receives less than half the research funding of breast cancer and treatments for the disease are trailing at least a decade behind.

How quickly does it develop? 

Prostate cancer usually develops slowly, so there may be no signs someone has it for many years, according to the NHS. 

If the cancer is at an early stage and not causing symptoms, a policy of ‘watchful waiting’ or ‘active surveillance’ may be adopted. 

Some patients can be cured if the disease is treated in the early stages.

But if it diagnosed at a later stage, when it has spread, then it becomes terminal and treatment revolves around relieving symptoms.

Thousands of men are put off seeking a diagnosis because of the known side effects from treatment, including erectile dysfunction.

Tests and treatment

Tests for prostate cancer are haphazard, with accurate tools only just beginning to emerge. 

There is no national prostate screening programme as for years the tests have been too inaccurate.

Doctors struggle to distinguish between aggressive and less serious tumours, making it hard to decide on treatment.

Men over 50 are eligible for a ‘PSA’ blood test which gives doctors a rough idea of whether a patient is at risk.

But it is unreliable. Patients who get a positive result are usually given a biopsy which is also not foolproof. 

Scientists are unsure as to what causes prostate cancer, but age, obesity and a lack of exercise are known risks. 

Anyone with any concerns can speak to Prostate Cancer UK’s specialist nurses on 0800 074 8383 or visit prostatecanceruk.org

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