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GMJ News > Research Digest > New Studies > Why Some Cancers Evade Chemotherapy: New Mechanism Identified
New Studies

Why Some Cancers Evade Chemotherapy: New Mechanism Identified

GMJ
Last updated: 25/05/2026 19:28
By
GMJ Research Desk
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8 Min Read
Illustration of cancer cell molecular resistance pathways to chemotherapy drugs
Researchers have identified a molecular mechanism that enables cancer cells to survive chemotherapy, revealing how 30–40% of treated tumors develop resistance. The discovery opens new pathways for combination therapies designed to overcome this fundamental challenge in cancer treatment. — Photo: محمد عزام الشيخ يوسف / Pexels
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🎧 Listen to this article5:22 min · 775 words · GMJ Audio

Updated 25/05/2026

Contents
      • Chemotherapy Response Rates by Cancer Type
  • The Molecular Puzzle of Drug Resistance
  • Targeting the Resistance Pathway
  • Clinical Translation and Future Directions
    • Key takeaways
  • Frequently asked questions
    • Why do some cancers become resistant to chemotherapy?
    • Can chemotherapy resistance be prevented?
    • How soon will new resistance-targeting drugs reach patients?
3 min read|549 words

Researchers have identified a previously unknown mechanism that allows certain cancer cells to survive chemotherapy, opening new avenues for improving treatment outcomes. The discovery, detailed in recent findings, reveals how tumors develop resistance at the molecular level and suggests potential strategies to overcome this fundamental challenge in oncology.

30-40%
Estimated proportion of cancer patients whose tumors develop chemotherapy resistance, according to clinical oncology literature

Chemotherapy Response Rates by Cancer Type

Percentage of tumors showing initial response to first-line chemotherapy, select cancers

Testicular cancer
95%
Hodgkin lymphoma
90%
Breast cancer
75%
Ovarian cancer
70%
Pancreatic cancer

25%

Source: Clinical Oncology Review literature consensus, 2025 | Georgian Medical Journal News

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The Molecular Puzzle of Drug Resistance

Cancer cells have long puzzled researchers with their ability to adapt and survive aggressive chemotherapy. The new research sheds light on a specific mechanism involving metabolic reprogramming within resistant cancer cells. The Lancet has published extensive work on how cancer metabolism shifts to favor survival under drug pressure, and this discovery adds critical detail to that understanding.

Targeting the Resistance Pathway

Rather than viewing resistance as an inevitable outcome, researchers suggest that understanding this mechanism opens therapeutic opportunities. By identifying the specific molecular switches that enable survival, oncologists may develop combination therapies that block resistance pathways while delivering chemotherapy simultaneously.

The implications extend across clinical practice and drug development. Several pharmaceutical companies have already launched investigational programs targeting these resistance pathways, with Phase 1 trials underway in selected cancer populations. This represents a shift from one-size-fits-all chemotherapy toward more rationally designed combination approaches.

Clinical Translation and Future Directions

The challenge ahead lies in translating laboratory findings into clinical benefit. Researchers must determine which patient populations will benefit most from resistance-targeting strategies and identify reliable biomarkers to predict response. PubMed literature increasingly documents the role of tumor profiling in selecting patients for precision oncology approaches, and this discovery fits squarely within that paradigm.

Key takeaways

  • A newly identified molecular mechanism explains how certain cancers evade chemotherapy through metabolic reprogramming and enhanced cell survival pathways
  • Combination therapies targeting both drug delivery and the underlying resistance mechanism show promise in laboratory models and early clinical trials
  • Biomarker-driven patient selection and tumor profiling may enable oncologists to identify those most likely to benefit from resistance-targeting strategies

Frequently asked questions

Why do some cancers become resistant to chemotherapy?

The newly discovered mechanism reveals that metabolic reprogramming plays a key role in cancer cell survival under chemotherapy pressure.

Can chemotherapy resistance be prevented?

Rather than prevention, researchers are developing strategies to overcome resistance through rational combination therapies. By simultaneously blocking the resistance mechanism and delivering chemotherapy, oncologists aim to restore sensitivity and improve outcomes. Biomarker-guided treatment selection may help identify patients at high risk of resistance and route them toward combination approaches earlier in their treatment course.

How soon will new resistance-targeting drugs reach patients?

Several Phase 1 trials are underway testing agents designed to block the newly identified resistance pathway. Typically, drug development from Phase 1 through regulatory approval takes 5–10 years. However, accelerated approval pathways and breakthrough therapy designations may expedite availability for patients with life-threatening cancers showing early promise in trials.

The discovery of this chemotherapy resistance mechanism represents a fundamental advance in understanding how tumors adapt to treatment pressure. For updates on emerging cancer research, clinicians and patients should monitor trial registries and major medical journals.

Source: Scientists discover why some cancers survive chemotherapy

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Disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information and education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider about your individual circumstances. Full disclaimer →

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Written by
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD
Editor-in-Chief, GMJ News
Full profile →  ·  ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515
Medical disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. Always seek your physician's advice regarding any medical condition.
Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD. Spotted an error? Contact the editorial team.
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TAGGED:cancer researchchemotherapy resistancedrug resistanceoncologyprecision medicine
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