A drug developed at Linköping University in Sweden protects against the  side effects of cancer treatments while strengthening the effects on the  tumour. An international drug evaluation is now starting up on a larger  group of patients. 
The results of the studies with the compound, known as  calmangafodipir  [Ca4Mn(DPDP)5], were published in the latest issue of the cancer  journal Translational Oncology with Professor Rolf G. G. Andersson as the main author.
The research was initiated on a substance called mangafodipir MnDPDP (see structure below), which  was used as a contrast media in magnetic resonance scans. But  pharmacologists at LiU discovered that it also protected healthy cells  in connection with cancer treatments.
"We found that the substance could affect the formation of oxygen  radicals, which are a cause of side effects in chemotherapy," says  Professor Andersson.
For example, the number of white blood cells decreases drastically in  almost all the patients, which opens the door to infections that could  even be fatal.
The researchers began with cell tests, and then went on to mice  infected with cancer cells. The mice were treated with chemotherapy and  were administered mangafodipir at the same time. Tumour formation  decreased while white blood cells were protected.
One problem was that a large portion of the manganese in the  substance was released; as a consequence, the positive effect subsided.  The free manganese can also be poisonous and cause brain damage. More at the ffollowing link...
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3542842/
