A chemotherapy drug used to fight bone-marrow cancer has the potential to treat and prevent potentially deadly heart failure, a powerful new drug-screening tool developed at UVA Health suggests.
The tool was created by University of Virginia researchers Jeffrey J. Saucerman and graduate student Taylor G. Eggertsen. The sophisticated computer model suggested the drug midostaurin could help prevent the enlargement of heart muscle cells that often precedes heart failure. Subsequent lab results bore that out.
While additional human testing is needed, Saucerman says the new computer model has demonstrated great potential for identifying already available drugs that can be repurposed to battle heart failure, a condition affecting millions of Americans.
“This new computer tool helps us find new uses for old drugs, and it also explains how they may work in the heart,” Saucerman said. “New drugs take decades to develop. We hope this tool will help us find drugs for heart failure that are already known to be safe and effective for other diseases.”

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