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New study suggests a “kick it while it’s down” approach to cancer treatment could improve cure rates

02.20.26 | City St George’s, University of London

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A new study provides hope that smarter timing of cancer treatments could improve cure rates.

The study’s Principal Investigator, Dr Robert Noble , Senior Lecturer at the Department of Mathematics, City, St George’s, University of London, sought to tackle a major problem in cancer care.

“Although tumours may at first shrink under therapy,” he explains, “in many cases they eventually regrow. These relapses stem from a small number of cancer cells that have gained mutations making the cells resistant to the treatment.”

The standard clinical approach is to wait and see if a tumour regrows before trying a different treatment. By this point, some tumour cells are likely to have gained mutations making them resistant to the second treatment, which then also fails.

Evolutionary theory suggests an alternative strategy. Instead of waiting, it might be better to switch to a second treatment while the tumour is still responding to the first one. This “kick it while it’s down” approach is most appropriate when doctors know from experience that even the best option for a first treatment often fails due to resistance.

As Dr Noble explains in a podcast about the study , “Evolutionary approaches have been very successful in other contexts, such as combatting antibiotic resistance, or predicting what vaccines we should use in a particular flu season. There is every reason to suppose that similar approaches should work in tumours.”

To test this hypothesis, Dr Noble and colleagues adapted mathematical methods more commonly used to understand how plants and animals evolve in response to environmental pressures, such as climate change.

In their study, the team concludes that their findings justify further experimental and clinical testing of this innovative evolutionary treatment strategy. Three small clinical trials are already underway in soft-tissue cancer, prostate cancer, and breast cancer. Further trials are in development.

“Our models predict that this new approach will generally outperform the standard of care,” explains Dr Noble. “A sequence of two treatments, even if optimally timed, is likely to succeed only in relatively small tumours. But we have reason to hope that switching between three or more treatments, following the same principle, could eliminate larger tumours.”

The full research article is published in the journal Genetics.

ENDS

Notes to editors

Media Contact

Dr Shamim Quadir, Senior Communications Officer, School of Science & Technology, City St George’s, University of London,: Tel: 0207 040 8782 email: shamim.quadir@citystgeorges.ac.uk .

Research Team

Dr Noble conducted this research with an international team of mathematical biologists. The work grew out of the final-year project of Srishti Patil, a master’s student at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Pune, who spent some months at City St George’s, University of London under Dr Noble’s supervision. The team also included Johns Hopkins University undergraduate Armaan Ahmed and Dr Noble’s long-term collaborator Dr Yannick Viossat of Université Paris Dauphine-PSL.

Genetics Society of America Podcast

The story behind the paper is told in an associated podcast recorded by the Genetics Society of America.

About City St George’s, University of London

City St George’s, University of London is the University of business, practice and the professions.

City St George’s attracts around 27,000 students from more than 170 countries.

Our academic range is broadly-based with world-leading strengths in business; law; health and medical sciences; mathematics; computer science; engineering; social sciences including international politics, economics and sociology; and the arts including journalism, dance and music.

In August 2024, City, University of London merged with St George’s, University of London creating a powerful multi-faculty institution. The combined university is now one of the largest suppliers of the health workforce in the capital, as well as one of the largest higher education destinations for London students.

City St George’s campuses are spread across London in Clerkenwell, Moorgate and Tooting, where we share a clinical environment with a major London teaching hospital.

Our students are at the heart of everything that we do, and we are committed to supporting them to go out and get good jobs.

Our research is impactful, engaged and at the frontier of practice. In the last REF (2021) 86 per cent of City research was rated as ‘world-leading’ 4* (40%) and ‘internationally excellent’ 3* (46%) and 100 per cent of St George’s impact case studies were judged as ‘world-leading’ or ‘internationally excellent’. As City St George’s we will seize the opportunity to carry out interdisciplinary research which will have positive impact on the world around us.

Over 175,000 former students in over 170 countries are members of the City St George’s Alumni Network.

City St George’s is led by Professor Sir Anthony Finkelstein.

Genetics

10.1093/genetics/iyaf255

Computational simulation/modeling

Cells

Preventing evolutionary rescue in cancer using two-strike therapy

26-Nov-2025

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Shamim Quadir
City St George’s, University of London
shamim.quadir@city.ac.uk

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
City St George’s, University of London. (2026, February 20). New study suggests a “kick it while it’s down” approach to cancer treatment could improve cure rates. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8Y4RG9DL/new-study-suggests-a-kick-it-while-its-down-approach-to-cancer-treatment-could-improve-cure-rates.html
MLA:
"New study suggests a “kick it while it’s down” approach to cancer treatment could improve cure rates." Brightsurf News, Feb. 20 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8Y4RG9DL/new-study-suggests-a-kick-it-while-its-down-approach-to-cancer-treatment-could-improve-cure-rates.html.