Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Some cancer drugs disrupt taste by changing the cells inside taste buds, study shows

04.21.26 | University of Colorado Anschutz

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB transfers large imagery and model outputs quickly between field laptops, lab workstations, and secure archives.

Some Cancer Drugs Disrupt Taste by Changing the Cells Inside Taste Buds, Study Shows

New research may explain why patients taking specific targeted cancer therapies often experience taste dysfunction.

Summary: Researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz have discovered that certain cancer drugs impact a specific protein that regulates taste buds. The findings, published in Development , could lead to new treatments that preserve taste function in cancer patients.

AURORA, Colo. (April 21, 2026) Researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz may have identified why many cancer patients say food suddenly tastes unpleasant during treatment.

The study, published today in Development , found that a class of targeted cancer drugs known as tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) can change how taste buds are maintained—reducing the ability to taste sweet foods and altering flavor perception overall. While the study was conducted in animal models, researchers believe similar changes likely occur in humans.

The findings offer the clearest explanation to date for a common but often overlooked side effect of cancer treatment.

What researchers found

Using mouse models and lab-grown taste tissue, scientists studied the cancer drug cabozantinib and discovered:

Researchers identified an unexpected cause: a protein called KIT.

While TKIs are used to block cancer growth pathways, they also unintentionally block KIT—an important regulator of taste cell development.

When KIT is blocked:

The proportion of sweet and bitter taste bud cells is very tightly controlled. When this proportion is altered, taste perception may drastically change.

“If you lose the sweet component of everything you eat, your entire sense of taste becomes distorted,” said senior author Linda Barlow, PhD, professor of cell and developmental biology at CU Anschutz.

Why it matters

TKIs are important anti-cancer drugs that significantly extend survival in several types of advanced cancers. However, an estimated 10% to 50% of patients taking these drugs experience taste changes, known as dysgeusia.

Though often considered minor, the impact of dysgeusia can be significant:

“It’s difficult for them to enjoy a meal with their family and friends,” Barlow said. “Nothing tastes good to them so they withdraw and become isolated. Isolation leads to depression.”

Study co-author Elaine Lam, MD, professor of medicine and medical oncology at the CU Anschutz Cancer Center, said the drugs are meant to block blood vessels developing in tumors, effectively starving them. Unfortunately, they also cause unintended consequences.

“People don’t eat and they lose weight. This sometimes leads us to reduce or interrupt the dose of their drugs,” said Lam, a kidney cancer specialist. “This research is important because it identifies the underlying mechanisms that affect taste. Now we have to figure out the best way to treat this.”

Lam said possible solutions include designing cancer drugs that avoid blocking KIT or developing treatments to protect taste function.

What’s next

Future research will focus on confirming these findings in patients and identifying ways to prevent or reduce taste changes.

Bottom line

Targeted cancer drugs called tyrosine kinase inhibitors may not destroy taste buds—but they can change their cellular makeup, shifting the balance away from sweet-sensing cells and potentially changing how food tastes.

The study in Development is titled “Tyrosine kinase inhibitors affect sweet taste and dysregulate fate selection of specific taste bud cell subtypes via KIT inhibition”. The lead author is Christina M. Piarowski, PhD. Additional authors are Jennifer K. Scott, Courtney E. Wilson, PhD, Heber I. Lara, PhD, Ernesto Salcedo, PhD, Andrew S. Han, Peter J. Dempsey, PhD and Jakob von Moltke, PhD. The study is available here .

About the University of Colorado Anschutz

The University of Colorado Anschutz is a world-class academic medical campus leading transformative advances in science, medicine, education and patient care. The campus includes the University of Colorado’s health professional schools, more than 60 centers and institutes, and two nationally ranked independent hospitals - UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital and Children's Hospital Colorado - which see nearly three million adult and pediatric patient visits each year. Innovative, interconnected and highly collaborative, CU Anschutz delivers life-changing treatments, exceptional patient care and top-tier professional training. The campus conducts world-renowned research supported by $890 million in funding, including $762 million in sponsored awards and $128 million in philanthropic gifts for research.

###

Development

Observational study

Animals

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors affect sweet taste and dysregulate fate selection of specific taste bud cell subtypes via KIT inhibition

21-Apr-2026

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

David Kelly
University of Colorado Anschutz
David.kelly@cuanschutz.edu

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Colorado Anschutz. (2026, April 21). Some cancer drugs disrupt taste by changing the cells inside taste buds, study shows. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8X5Y45O1/some-cancer-drugs-disrupt-taste-by-changing-the-cells-inside-taste-buds-study-shows.html
MLA:
"Some cancer drugs disrupt taste by changing the cells inside taste buds, study shows." Brightsurf News, Apr. 21 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8X5Y45O1/some-cancer-drugs-disrupt-taste-by-changing-the-cells-inside-taste-buds-study-shows.html.