Archive for the ‘Virus’ Category

Ottawa scientist wins cancer research award

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Posted 11 May 2012 — by James Street
Category Inc, Jennerex
By Pauline Tam, The Ottawa Citizen May 9, 2012

OTTAWA — Ottawa researcher John Bell has won a $22,000 award from the Canadian Cancer Society for his discovery of genetically engineered viruses that have the potential to attack cancerous tumours.

Bell, a senior scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and the University of Ottawa, was named the 2011 recipient of the Robert L. Noble Prize, which recognizes outstanding achievements in cancer research.

Bell’s experimental viruses, currently being tested in patients, have been shown to be a safe and potentially useful drug against cancers that have spread to other parts of the body, which are the hardest to treat.

Early results even raise the possibility that the treatment could actually prevent the spread of tumours — a long-sought goal in the hunt for better cancer therapies. The viruses also showed signs of quickly infecting and killing cancer cells, while protecting healthy cells, which existing therapies can’t do.

Bell has established a San Francisco-based spinoff company, Jennerex Inc., to commercialize his experimental therapy.

© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen

Cancer cells send out the alarm on tumor-killing virus

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Posted 18 Mar 2012 — by James Street
Category Brain, CCN1, Virus, virus studies

March 15, 2012 in Cancer

Brain-tumor cells that are infected with a cancer-killing virus release a protein “alarm bell” that warns other tumor cells of the impending infection and enables them to mount a defense against the virus, according to a study led by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James).

The infected release a protein called CCN1 into the narrow space between where it initiates an antiviral response. The response limits the spread of the oncolytic virus through the tumor, reducing its ability to kill cancer cells and limiting the efficacy of the therapy.

The study suggests that cells in general might use this mechanism to help control viral infections, and that blocking the response might improve oncolytic viral therapy for glioblastoma and perhaps future gene therapy treatments.

Oncolytic viruses replicate in tumor cells and kill them. They have shown promise for the treatment of glioblastoma, the most common and deadly form of brain cancer. Patients with glioblastoma survive about 15 months after diagnosis on average, so there is great need for new treatments.

The study was published in a recent issue of the journal Research.

“We found that, in the extracellular matrix, this orchestrates a striking cellular antiviral response that reduces viral replication and limits its cytolytic efficacy,” says researcher and principal investigator Balveen Kaur, associate professor of Neurological Surgery at the OSUCCC – James.

“These findings are significant because they reveal a novel mechanism used by infected cells to fight viral infections and alert adjacent uninfected cells to prepare their defenses to fight off forthcoming viral attacks,” Kaur says.

Kaur notes that CCN1 helps regulate cellular functions that include adhesion, migration, and proliferation, and that it is overexpressed in 68 percent of glioblastoma specimens.

Previous research led by Kaur found that oncolytic virus therapy induced the release of CCN1 into the tumor microenvironment. For this study, Kaur and her colleagues used glioma cell lines, oncolytic viruses derived from human herpesvirus type 1 (HSV-1), and glioblastoma animal models. Key findings include:

  • CNN1 expression is upregulated by the oncolytic but not by chemotherapy or radiation treatment. Thus, it may be a general response of glioma cells to viral infection.
  • In the extracellular space, CCN1 reduces viral replication and the killing of glioma cells.
  • CCN1 induces a type-I interferon antiviral response using an integrin cell-surface receptor.

“Overall, this finding reveals how extracellular signaling can contribute to viral clearance,” Kaur says. “We can now utilize this knowledge to improve future viral gene therapy.”

Provided by Ohio State University Medical Center

Taking a gamble on innovative cancer research

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Posted 02 Mar 2012 — by James Street
Category Immune System, Natural Killer Cells, Virus

dakshana bascaramurty

From Thursday’s Globe and Mail

If this was the case, Dr. Ehrhardt wondered if lampreys could potentially detect cancers that other antibodies were missing.

Stimulate the immune system with a virus

The researcher:

Rebecca Auer, clinical oncologist and associate scientist of cancer therapeutics at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

The idea:

“The time before and after surgery is considered this untouchable time where you can’t give any therapies against cancer because the patient has to heal,” Dr. Auer said.

Problem is, this hands-off period is when a patient’s immune system is weakened and his cancer can grow and spread.

Dr. Auer wants to understand why one particular part of the immune system – Natural Killer cells – are suppressed after surgery, but also how to reverse that. She plans to use a unique type of virus therapy at the time of the surgery to stimulate those Natural Killer cells so they continue fighting the cancer in that key period of post-operative recovery. She’ll test her theory on both animal and human models.

The inspiration behind it:

During her residency, Dr. Auer worked on a team that looked at oncolytic viruses – viruses that kill cancers but leave normal tissues unharmed. Several years later, when she was performing surgeries on patients with colorectal cancer, she wondered whether there was a place for new types of therapy, including viruses, in boosting a patient’s immunity post-surgery.

“If Natural Killer cells are so important after surgery and they don’t work very well after surgery … maybe if we stimulate them with viruses at the time of surgery, we could improve the outcome of patients,” she said.

Take the sniper approach to cancer treatment

The researcher:

Kevin Kane, professor in the medical microbiology and immunology department of the University of Alberta

The idea:

Consider chemotherapy the atom-bomb approach to treating cancer: You might achieve the goal of destroying the body’s cancer cells, but you’ll also annihilate plenty of healthy cells. Dr. Kane’s project aims to kill cancer like a sniper.

His team will use a new screening technology to analyze prostate-cancer proteins and figure out which ones can be identified and targeted by killer cells, a key component of the body’s immune system.

“Our idea is to be able to direct those killer cells to kill the tumour cells but not surrounding cells,” Dr. Kane said.

The inspiration behind it:

Dr. Kane read about this unique process used to screen drugs in which thousands of genes were analyzed at once.

“I saw that that had great potential and nobody had used it with the immune system,” he said.

He hypothesized that if he knew which proteins stimulated which killer cells, he’d be able to expand the number of those killer cells and transfer them back into the patient as a way of treating their cancer.

If this was the case, Dr. Ehrhardt wondered if lampreys could potentially detect cancers that other antibodies were missing.

Stimulate the immune system with a virus

The researcher:

Rebecca Auer, clinical oncologist and associate scientist of cancer therapeutics at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

The idea:

“The time before and after surgery is considered this untouchable time where you can’t give any therapies against cancer because the patient has to heal,” Dr. Auer said.

Problem is, this hands-off period is when a patient’s immune system is weakened and his cancer can grow and spread.

Dr. Auer wants to understand why one particular part of the immune system – Natural Killer cells – are suppressed after surgery, but also how to reverse that. She plans to use a unique type of virus therapy at the time of the surgery to stimulate those Natural Killer cells so they continue fighting the cancer in that key period of post-operative recovery. She’ll test her theory on both animal and human models.

The inspiration behind it:

During her residency, Dr. Auer worked on a team that looked at oncolytic viruses – viruses that kill cancers but leave normal tissues unharmed. Several years later, when she was performing surgeries on patients with colorectal cancer, she wondered whether there was a place for new types of therapy, including viruses, in boosting a patient’s immunity post-surgery.

“If Natural Killer cells are so important after surgery and they don’t work very well after surgery … maybe if we stimulate them with viruses at the time of surgery, we could improve the outcome of patients,” she said.

Take the sniper approach to cancer treatment

The researcher:

Kevin Kane, professor in the medical microbiology and immunology department of the University of Alberta

The idea:

Consider chemotherapy the atom-bomb approach to treating cancer: You might achieve the goal of destroying the body’s cancer cells, but you’ll also annihilate plenty of healthy cells. Dr. Kane’s project aims to kill cancer like a sniper.

His team will use a new screening technology to analyze prostate-cancer proteins and figure out which ones can be identified and targeted by killer cells, a key component of the body’s immune system.

“Our idea is to be able to direct those killer cells to kill the tumour cells but not surrounding cells,” Dr. Kane said.

The inspiration behind it:

Dr. Kane read about this unique process used to screen drugs in which thousands of genes were analyzed at once.

“I saw that that had great potential and nobody had used it with the immune system,” he said.

He hypothesized that if he knew which proteins stimulated which killer cells, he’d be able to expand the number of those killer cells and transfer them back into the patient as a way of treating their cancer.

Lab at Hershey Medical Center identifies a virus that could kill cancer

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Posted 28 Nov 2011 — by James Street
Category AAV2, H101, Virus

This is not the kind of lab we picture when we think of world-changing science. It’s not the clean, spotless modern laboratories of television or movies.

It’s a cluttered, workaday environment, where plastic test tubes rub shoulders with petri dishes and tubs of chemicals on busy shelves.

The white board isn’t covered with the scrawl of complex mathematical formulas, but reminders of whose turn it is to buy the doughnuts.

But it is here, on the fifth floor of the Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, where Dr. Craig Meyers and his team might have conducted a miracle.

What he and his lab claim discovery of is breathtaking in its simplicity.

A common virus, omnipresent in the world.

When it infects humans, it does no harm.

But introduce it into certain kinds of tumors and the virus appears to go wild, liquefying every cancer cell it comes into contact with.

It’s the type of discovery that could change the world.

And like all great stories of scientific discovery, it begins with a moment of sublime serendipity, not unlike Isaac Newton nodding off beneath an apple tree.

A TINY VIRUS

It’s one of the smallest, simplest viruses and yet adeno-associated virus type 2, or AAV2, could be among the most important agents in modern medicine.

That’s because it’s almost perfectly imperfect.

For whatever reason, through its evolution, AAV2 developed what would, in most cases, be a dead end — it cannot easily reproduce.

Viruses live and reproduce through asexual replication.

In the simplest terms, they infect an organism and attack living cells, inserting viral genes inside healthy cells. The viral genes then hijack the cell, using it to reproduce and create more viruses.

The new viruses are released into the environment, where they begin infecting other healthy cells.

AAV2 doesn’t work that way.

At the University of Florida in Gainsville, Nicholas Muzyczka has made a career studying AAV2 and he knows the virus about as well as anyone.

“And the deal with [AAV2] is that it will go into the cells in your body — and do nothing,” Muzyczka said. “It’ll just sit there.”

By itself, the virus is harmless and, in some cases, won’t even replicate.

Instead, it relies on a “helper” virus to poke it along. One of its helper viruses is believed to be the human papillomavirus, or HPV, which is widely believed to be one of the major causes of cervical cancer.

There has also been evidence that not only does HPV impact AAV2, but AAV2 might have some form of impact on HPV — and alter the chances of someone developing cervical cancer.

Which is exactly what Meyers’ lab at Penn State was studying when the lab had its Newton-under-the-apple-tree moment five years ago.

What happened involves a cervical cancer sample, some AAV2 and a few extra days in an incubator.

‘WE THOUGHT SOMETHING HAD GONE WRONG’

Meyers has spent the last 18 years at Penn State, most of it studying HPV.

He was one of the first scientists to grow the virus in a laboratory setting, and today his lab is one of the major suppliers of HPV for scientific studies.

A few years ago, he was continuing his research into HPV, cervical cancer and the relationship with AAV2.

Other studies indicated that women with cervical cancer don’t have AAV2 and women with AAV2 don’t have cervical cancer.

Meyers and his lab were trying to figure out why.

Their method was simple: Infect groups of cervical cancer cells with AAV2 and harvest the cells after 24, 48 or 72 hours to note any changes taking place.

On a whim, Meyers told one of his research assistants to infect a cancer cell culture and let it sit for awhile — say, a week.

A week later, she walked into his office and said something strange had happened. That culture of cancer cells they had infected a week ago?

They were all dead.

“We thought something had gone wrong,” Meyers said. “My first reaction was: ‘The incubator. I’ll have to get the incubator fixed.’”

The lab repeated the process five, 10, a dozen times. Each time, it had the same result.

A week after being infected with AAV2, the cervical cancer cells were dead.

The lab began to spread out its research, collecting other types of cancer samples from other labs to infect with AAV2, including breast cancer.

Each time, they had the same results: Infect the cancer cells, wait a week and the cells die. By replicating the experiment, the laboratory was able to gain some understanding of the mechanics of what was happening.

“What the virus seems to be doing is turning on [a gene in] all these cancer cells that causes them to die, to turn on themselves and commit suicide,” Meyers said.

Even more encouraging, when his lab infected mice that had human breast cancer tumors with AAV2 earlier this year, they found the tumors had liquefied — a reassuring result because that isn’t always true.

“A lot of times in science, you tend to plan out your experiments and you have a goal, your hypothesis of what you’re trying to prove,” Meyers said. “But sometimes you see bits of data or someone else’s work and you get an idea … a lot of times some of the best things come from those little ideas.”

WE’VE BEEN HERE BEFORE

The Penn State lab isn’t the first to announce what could be a major breakthrough using viruses to combat cancer.

Twenty years-ago, researchers at the University of California thought they found the silver bullet — a modified cold virus that killed about 60 percent of human tumors grown in laboratory mice.

News of the research caused The New York Times to ask: “Can the common cold cure cancer?”

Headlines in The Los Angles Times and The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette proclaimed the research to be “a cancer-killer.”

It didn’t turn out that way.

During clinical testing in humans, the modified virus fizzled. But the research, which centered around a gene named P53 did rejuvenate an entire field of study — oncolytic virology.

The link between viruses and cancer isn’t anything new. For close to a century, scientists have believed there is some connection between the two.

In 1904, doctors first noticed that leukemia patients occasionally went through periods where they appeared to get better — and those periods corresponded with outbreaks of the flu.

The 1950s saw a flurry of activity, when several viruses — including hepatitis B and West Nile — were used in human trials in an attempt to treat cancer. While both viruses caused some tumor regression, the side effects, namely contracting hepatitis and West Nile, outweighed the benefits.

The study of viruses as anti-cancer agents petered out under the weight of a basic catch-22: Researchers needed something tough enough to survive the human immune system, but also a virus that wouldn’t adversely affect normal human cells.

When then-President Richard Nixon went before the nation in 1971 to declare a crusade against cancer, it was widely believed that cancer was caused by viruses altering the DNA of healthy cells.

While that’s true in some cases, in others cases, cancer’s runaway growth of cells is caused by faulty genetics or cell mutation due to environmental conditions.

It wasn’t until decades later that technology and basic scientific understanding — of cancer and virology — caught up to the idea of using viruses or “oncolytic viruses” to deliver anti-cancer treatments.

Since the first studies in the mid-1990s with the mutated cold virus, there have been a number of advances in the field, and numerous modified viruses are currently being tested around the world.

Five years ago in China, the first oncolytic virus, H101, was approved for clinical use, ironically a variant of the modified cold virus studied in the mid-’90s in California.

The Chinese — their testing standards are a bit more lax than ours — use H101 in conjunction with chemotherapy to reduce or eliminate tumor growth in patients with head and neck cancers.

In the U.S., a Massachusetts-based biotechnology firm named BioVex is testing a modified version of herpes in patients with stages III and IV of melanoma.

An earlier study by BioVex showed eight of the 50 patients treated with the virus recovered completely and a majority of the patients showed improvement.

The treatment holds enough promise that Amgen, one of the world’s largest biotechnology companies offered $1 billion to acquire BioVex earlier this year.

BENCH TO BEDSIDE

The common cold viral study two decades ago highlights some of the major hurdles in moving a virus-based treatment from the laboratory to the bedside.

There’s a world of biological complexity between mice and humans, and the vast majority of drugs, somewhere around 90 percent, never bridge that gap.

In the case of the modified cold virus, researchers didn’t account for the fact that most people, at one time or another, suffer from the cold and build biological defenses against it.

So when they introduced the engineered virus, the body attacked and killed it, reducing its effectiveness in treating patients.

Then they ran into their second major hurdle — discouraged, their industry partner, Pfizer, pulled its funding from the project.

The American Cancer Society, which funds cancer research, estimates it takes about 10 to 12 years to fully develop a drug or therapy from the laboratory to bedside use.

“There’s just tremendous challenges,” cancer society spokeswoman Lynne Ayres said.

Drugs have to go through a series of tests prior to their use on humans, then at least three levels of human testing.

All of which requires time and money — roughly $2 billion annually. The American Cancer Society and the National Institute of Health are only able to pay for about 10 percent of the grant requests they receive.

That means a lot of research could be stalled in the pipeline. Even Meyers’ research wasn’t able to secure national funding for his preliminary testing of the AAV2 virus.

His most recent research was funded through a roughly $35,000 grant from the Pennsylvania Breast Cancer Coalition.

Even once a drug or therapy passes through the FDA approval process, there’s one final step before it makes it to the general public — production and distribution.

“You’ve got to get funding to bring it to the market, which involves getting [pharmaceutical industry] support,” Ayres said.

And, she asked, what is the industry going to spend development costs on?

“Something they can make money on,” she said. “These are the realities.”

HUMAN TRIALS ARE YEARS AWAY

Meyers’ research — and the resulting publicity — have made him something of a public figure overnight.

Every day, he gets emails from people congratulating him on his findings. And every day, he receives just as many from people begging for a cure.

It’s a request he simply cannot fulfill yet.

Yes, the virus appears to work in a laboratory setting and has destroyed tumors in mice. But his research still has a long road ahead of it before it makes its way to hospitals.

His next step will be to push toward clinical trials in people. But first he has to complete pre-clinical testing before he can apply to the Food and Drug Administration for human testing.

Bottom line: Even with unlimited funding, it could be another two to four years before Meyers injects AAV2 into the first patients.

Until then, he’ll continue to receive the emails from desperate people, begging him for a cure.

“It’s a very emotional topic. Everyone has somebody they know who has one type of cancer or another,” Meyers said. “And cancer’s not like one day you’re alive and the next day you’re dead. It’s a long, debilitating, chronic problem.

“You need to be reminded sometimes that the research you’re doing could have an affect on people out there.”

In the meantime, Meyers isn’t the only one looking at AAV2.

Remember Muzyczka at the University of Florida?

He’s among the many researchers looking at AAV2 for its use as a transportation device for genes.

Because the virus is so simple, it’s relatively easy for scientists to remove its small amount of genes and replace them with human ones.

The idea is to introduce the carrier virus into the body of a person who might be suffering from a genetic disorder due to a problem in their own body’s DNA structure.

AAV2 virus, carrying the human genes, enters the patient’s cells and inserts its DNA fragment into our genes, repairing or replacing the broken sequence.

Because the virus is small, simple and doesn’t easily replicate, it reduces the chances of something going wrong.

“In a lot of different ways, it’s proving to be the safest way to deliver genes,” Muzyczka said. “And a lot of people are getting kind of excited about this because it does seem innocuous.”

It’s already being tested to treat hemophilia in England, where researchers used it to introduce healthy genes into people with the condition.

AAV2 then could be the key to one of the medical holy of holies — real, systemic gene therapy.

Not only could it kill cancer cells, but it could be the vehicle to treat other genetic conditions, such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and cystic fibrosis.

“No one’s at the point where the Food and Drug Administration has approved it,” Muzyczka said. “But it is getting to the point where people think it’s going to work.”

Steps to FDA approval
It’s a long, long road from the laboratory to the bedside, governed by the Food and Drug Administration. The vast majority of all drugs and therapies developed don’t make it. The American Cancer Society estimates it takes about 10 to 12 years to fully develop a drug or therapy from the laboratory to bedside use.
1. Preclinical (animal) testing. This is where Dr. Meyers team is in the process.
2. Phase 1 studies (typically involve 20 to 80 people).
3. Phase 2 studies (typically involve a few dozen to about 300 people).
4. Phase 3 studies (typically involve several hundred to about 3,000 people).
5. Submission of a new drug application is the formal step asking the FDA to consider a drug for marketing approval.
6. After an application is received, the FDA has to decide whether to file it so it can be reviewed.
7. Review of the application resulting in application approval or the issue of a response letter.
Source: Federal Food and Drug Administration

Dr. Craig Meyers

  • Age: 53
  • Professor of microbiology and immunology at Penn State College of Medicine
  • Received his doctorate from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1990. Did his postdoctoral training at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago.
  • Meyers’ lab focuses on the human papillomavirus, HPV, which is believed to be one of the major causes of cervical cancer. Meyers’ lab was one of the first to grow HPV in a laboratory setting. He has recently been researching the relationship between HPV and a common virus, adeno-associated virus type 2.
  • Lives in Derry Township with his wife of 31 years. They have four sons and two granddaughters.

Smallpox vaccine extends life in cancer trial

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Posted 06 Nov 2011 — by James Street
Category Clinical Trials, Liver, Melanoma, Vaccine, Virus, virus studies

By Deena Beasley

Sat Nov 5, 2011 9:03am EDT

(Reuters) – A genetically engineered smallpox vaccine reduced the risk of death for patients with advanced liver cancer by nearly 60 percent in a mid-stage study, prompting the launch of a later-stage trial.

Scientists at institutions including the University of California, San Diego, and privately held biotech company Jennerex Inc presented Phase 2 trial data on Saturday showing that patients given high doses of the altered vaccine, known as JX-594, lived for a median of 13.8 months compared with 6.7 months for patients treated with one-tenth of that dose.

The small 30-patient study found that 66 percent of the high-dose patients were alive after one year, compared with 23 percent of the low-dose group.

Temporary flu-like symptoms were the main side effect seen in the trial, which was presented in San Francisco at a meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Scientists have been intrigued for decades with the idea of using viruses to alert the immune system to seek and destroy cancerous cells. That interest has taken off in recent years as advances in genetic engineering allow them to customize viruses that target tumors.

JX-594 is derived from a strain of the virus vaccinia, once commonly used to vaccinate children against smallpox.

“Viruses are inherently cancer selective and tumor cells are inherently susceptible to viral attack,” said Dr. David Kirn, chief medical officer at Jennerex. “We enhance selectivity by further attenuating and weakening the virus in normal tissue.”

He said the first patient has been enrolled in a Phase 2b study comparing JX-594 with standard care in 120 liver cancer patients who have stopped responding to Nexavar, also known as sorafenib, sold by Onyx Pharmaceuticals.

Patients in the trial will first be given an intravenous infusion of JX-594, followed by direct injections into the tumor. Dr. Kirn said the trial will also allow for more continuous dosing than in earlier studies.

Jennerex plans to launch next year a Phase 3 head-to-head trial comparing JX-594 with Nexavar and is conducting earlier-stage trials in other types of cancer.

Other forays into using engineered viruses include biotech giant Amgen Inc’s deal in January to pay up to $1 billion for BioVex and its cancer drug development platform based on the herpes simplex virus.

Amgen said last month that it had completed enrollment in a Phase 3 trial of the therapy in melanoma patients.

Jennerex is primarily funded by investors from Canada and South Korea. European rights to JX-594 have been licensed to Transgene SA. Other regional licenses are held by Lee’s Pharmaceutical Ltd for China and Green Cross Corp for South Korea.

(Reporting by Deena Beasley; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

Oncolytic Virus Kills Tumor in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

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Posted 26 Oct 2011 — by James Street
Category Virus

Caroline Helwick

October 25, 2011 (San Francisco, California) — Laboratory studies conducted at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City suggest that triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) might respond to treatment with an oncolytic agent.

The findings were reported here at the American College of Surgeons 97th Annual Clinical Congress.

“We found that [the mutant herpes virus] NV1066 is an effective oncolytic agent against triple-negative breast cancer in vitro and in vivo,” said Sepideh Gholami, MD, a research fellow in the laboratory of Yuman Fong, MD, which is considered to be at the forefront in oncolytic viral therapy research.

“Oncolytic viruses are attractive therapeutic agents that destroy tumor cells without the accompanying destruction of normal cells,” she said. The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway is known to be important in TNBC, and activated (phosphorylated) MAPK signaling has been shown to mediate efficient replication of NV1066 through the deletion of the delta gamma(1)34.5 gene.

In other words, she said, TNBC cells have high levels of phosphorylated MAPK, a protein that promotes tumor growth and contributes to resistance to current therapies. The herpes virus specifically targets cells that overexpress this protein, which is the rationale for this approach.

The study aimed to determine whether NV1066 could kill TNBC cells effectively. The researchers also examined the functional effects of NV1066 on the MAPK signal transduction pathway during viral infection.

Dr. Gholami and colleagues infected 5 different TNBC cell lines with the NV1066 herpes simplex virus. After treatment with the virus, the most sensitive cell lines demonstrated a 90% cell kill rate within 1 week; the less sensitive lines demonstrated a 70% cell kill rate.

In addition, sensitive cell lines expressed higher baseline levels of phosphorylated MAPK than resistant cell lines, and viral infection caused the downregulation of phosphorylated MAPK by 48 hours, she reported.

“TNBC cells support efficient viral replication, with over 1 million copy numbers observed, which is more than a 1000-fold increase,” she said.

“Since baseline phosphorylated MAPK levels positively correlated with sensitivity to NV1066, they might therefore be used as a clinical marker for selecting patients for viral therapy,” she suggested.

Tumor Regression Almost Complete

The researchers created flank tumors and injected them with NV1066 or a control compound. Within 5 days, tumor volume significantly decreased in the experimental group; within 3 weeks, they observed “near-complete tumor regression,” Dr. Gholami reported.

While tumors in control animals grew from a mean of 200 to 700 cm3, they essentially disappeared in animals infected with the oncolytic herpes virus (P < .002). The mean volume of treated tumors was reduced 42-fold, compared with those treated with the control compound (P = .0001), by day 19.

“The difference was dramatic because sometimes we can stop tumor growth but not necessarily achieve tumor regression,” she explained. “Our results are very exciting because we may be coming up with an approach that could potentially exploit the unique vulnerabilities of these specific cancer cells.”

Oncolytic viruses are being studied in head and neck cancers, but this study is the first to show promise in TNBC. If additional animal studies are also positive, human clinical trials are expected.

“Our goal is to improve this version of the virus and get it into a clinical trial,” Dr. Gholami said. She added that NV1066 might also have a role as a sensitizer to radiation therapy and to treatment with agents targeting the epidermal growth-factor receptor, by virtue of its ability to downregulate MAPK.

Ryan Fields, MD, from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, finds the results interesting, and suggested that a better understanding of viral biology will help move this potentially therapeutic field forward. “Gene therapy has been around a long time using a number of different viral agents, and success has often been limited by a lack of understanding of the viral biology,” he said.

He questioned whether the use of an oncolytic virus might be producing an immune response, because “you are generating a large amount of tumor necrosis when you inject the virus directly into the tumor,” he said. He also noted that “this seems to be a nice strategy to use in combination with a MEK inhibitor.”

Dr. Gholami indicated that her group is, indeed, studying the agent in combination with a MEK inhibitor and an mTOR inhibitor, “with very promising results.”

Dr. Gholami and Dr. Fields have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

American College of Surgeons (ACS) 97th Annual Clinical Congress. Presented October 24, 2011.

Medscape Medical News © 2011 WebMD, LLC
Send comments and news tips to news@medscape.net.

Novel Cancer-Targeting Virus Therapy Shows Efficacy in Early-Stage Trial

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Posted 01 Sep 2011 — by James Street
Category Liver, Vaccine, Virus, virus studies
By Anna Azvolinsky, PhD | August 31, 2011
 Scientists at Jennerex, Inc. in San Francisco, and collaborators from University of Pennsylvania and the University of Ottawa in Canada have just engineered a poxvirus, JX-594, to selectively replicate in tumor cells that have an activated EGFR/ Ras pathway, but not in normal tissue. The poxvirus acts as a vehicle to deliver a transgene to the cancer cells that results in expression and subsequent cell lysis and anticancer immunity.
Electron micrograph of an epidermal cell with cytoplasmic degeneration and numerous poxvirus particles (V); a second cell has marginated chromatin (MC) and a filamentous matrix (F) in the nucleus, which corresponds to the central nuclear clearing seen histologically. Insert shows typical poxvirus particles. (Courtesy of D. A. Gregg.)

An oncolytic viral delivery system can either supply a high concentration of a biologic for cancer treatment, or an imaging biologic directly to the tumor. In an article published in Nature (doi:10.1038/nature10358) David H. Kim, MD, Caroline J. Breitbach, PhD, and colleagues demonstrate that JX-594 selectively infects cancer tissue, replicating and expressing the transgene products within the tumor cells. The intravenous (IV) infusion of the virus did not clinically affect normal tissue and the dose-dependent effect is seen after a single intravenous injection.

As the authors highlight in the abstract, the results demonstrate the potential utility of this platform in cancer treatment. This is the first in-human demonstration of delivery and transgene expression via an oncolytic virus in metastatic solid tumors using an IV administration.

Prior to the phase I initiation, the authors demonstrated that JX-594 selectively infected ex vivo tumor tissue within 24 hours, but not normal tissue or peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The dose-escalating clinical trial aimed to test whether JX-594 could infect metastatic tumors after an IV delivery to 23 late-stage solid cancer patients.

Trial Results

JX-594 was well-tolerated and dose-limiting toxicities were not observed with drug dose-escalation. Common adverse events were flulike symptoms of fever, chills, fatigue, headache, nausea, and some hypotension, vomiting, and anorexia. IL-6 and IL-10 levels increased in patients but IL-1 levels did not change, and IL-4 levels decreased transiently. All six high-dose patients developed neutralizing antibodies to the virus but there appeared to be no correlation between antibody titers and replication, safety, or tumor activity of the compound.

JX-594 delivery and replication in tumors were confirmed in biopsies. The authors suggest that suppression of microscopic tumor foci occurred as there was less frequent new tumor growth at high compared to low doses. FDG-PET scans showed antitumor activity in two of the five high-dose patients.

JX-594 is a proprietary, engineered, vaccinia (a type of poxvirus) vaccine-derived oncoloytic virus. The researchers cite these viruses as being well suited for this use because: 1) vaccinia has evolved mechanisms for IV stability, including a resistance to antibody as well as complement-mediated neutralization in the blood system; 2) vaccinia is able to spread to different tissues and has motility within tissues; 3) the large size of the varions may preferentially distribute the virus within tumors where the new vasculature increases permeability; and 4) vaccinia virus replication depends on the EGFR/Ras signaling pathway, a pathway that’s frequently mutated in epithelial cancers.

JX-594 was specifically designed to lyse cancer cells; to reduce the blood supply to tumors through the targeting and destruction of their vasculature; and to stimulate the body’s immune response against the cancer cells.

The genome of the vaccinia virus in JX-594 was specifically engineered with an inactivated viral thymidine kinase (TK) gene, and expression of the human granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (hGM-CSF) and beta-galactosidase transgenes. Deleting the TK gene makes the virus dependent on cellular TK, which is expressed at high levels in cancer cells. The hGM-CSF additionally complements the cancer cell lysis pathway, which results in tumor necrosis, blockage of tumor vasculature, and an antitumor immune response. The vaccinia strain backbone has been safely used for vaccination of millions of people worldwide.

Although this phase I trial was not designed to test clinical efficacy, the results show activity at high doses in metastatic cancer patients, suggesting that further studies with JX-594 in solid tumor patients is warranted.

A previous phase I trial of intratumoral injection into liver tumors showed good tolerability and replication of the virus. A total of 100 patients with tumor types ranging from melanoma, colon, kidney, and lung cancers have been shown to respond to the treatment. JX-594 is currently in an international phase II trial in patients with primary liver cancer, alone and in combination with sorafenib.

Jordan baffled doctors when his leukaemia vanished, new evidence suggests a remarkable explanation… can a fever cure cancer?

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Posted 11 Oct 2010 — by James Street
Category Immune System, Metastases, Virus, virus studies

By John Naish

Last updated at 10:57 PM on 20th September 2010

Eighteen months ago, Jordan Harden’s despairing doctors gave him just weeks to live – the leukaemia he’d battled for much of his life had returned.

Given the heartbreaking news, Jordan’s parents, Garry and Claire, decided to take their three-year-old for a final holiday together, to Disneyland in Paris.

They told the hospital they were so distressed they didn’t want to receive any more calls from doctors about his test scans.

New outlook: Claire Harden with son Jordan whose leukaemia went into remission after he had a high feverNew outlook: Claire Harden with son Jordan whose leukaemia went into remission after he had a high fever

‘I just did not want to know,’ says Claire. ‘I just wanted to enjoy this last chance together.’

But, days before they set off, the hospital did call – with the astonishing news that Jordan’s cancer had gone. Now, Jordan is at school, just like any other healthy five-year-old boy.

In a similarly amazing case, soon after her birth in 2009, Grace Woodhead was diagnosed with a swift-growing and inoperable brain cancer that doctors said would kill her within a few months.

But, in February, the tumour started shrinking and continues to do so; doctors have now told Grace’s parents that their 19-month-old is no longer going to die from the disease.

And, only this month, the Mail reported the extraordinary case of Peter Crane, 60, a retired teacher whose incurable form of blood cancer simply disappeared 18 months after he was diagnosed. He is officially in remission.

‘I couldn’t believe it when they told me,’ says Mr Crane from East Boldon, South Tyneside. ‘I was in shock.’

He is now enjoying a new lease of life with his wife Mary and says: ‘My blood counts had been normal for about 12 months, so it had disappeared without the need for any treatment.’

All these patients have one thing in common – there is no accepted medical explanation as to why their cancers have disappeared. Doctors call such cases ‘spontaneous remissions’.

‘The doctors told us there was no sign at all of recovery… I don’t know how we can be so lucky’

Many others are content to call them ‘miracles’ and leave it at that. But researchers increasingly believe many such reprieves are actually caused by a quirk of nature that could be harnessed to save the lives of countless other patients – and the answer could be as simple as the patient having a fever.

Jordan, from Wishaw, near Glasgow, was only ten weeks old when he was diagnosed with the blood cancer, acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

Parents Garry, 31, and Claire, 27, worried that he seemed limp and unresponsive, so they took him to see the GP. The doctor thought there was nothing wrong, but the Hardens persuaded their local hospital to test him for meningitis.

The blood tests revealed he had leukaemia and Jordan was rushed into intensive care for a blood transfusion. He then endured several six-month bouts of aggressive chemotherapy.

When this did not work, Garry and Claire paid for private treatment involving an experimental stem-cell transplant in Barcelona, Spain. This was also ineffective.

When the Hardens took Jordan for hospital scans in December 2008, the little boy’s outlook was bleak.

‘The doctors told us there was no sign at all of recovery and that the cancer had come back even more aggressively,’ says his father Garry, a security guard. ‘There was nothing more they could do and they gave him a few weeks to live – all he had was palliative care.’

It was tragic news, however the family decided to make Jordan’s last few weeks as happy as possible, including a trip to Disneyland.

‘Just as we were getting ready to go, the consultant called, asking us to come in. We panicked: the doctors had previously told us Jordan’s body could not take any more chemotherapy. But the news was amazing. The latest scans showed the leukaemia had disappeared.’

After so many months racked by worry, the family were overjoyed, but perplexed – as were the doctors.

‘They just don’t know how it happened,’ says Garry. ‘They had never seen this type of leukaemia go into remission.’

Indeed, Jordan was thought to have among the lowest chances of survival of all the children with whom he was in hospital. Many of those children have since died.

As Garry puts its simply: ‘I don’t know how we can be so lucky’.

Spontaneous regression or remission has been reported in many cancers, but is most often seen in those of the skin, testes and kidney, as well as in some forms of lymphoma and leukaemia. So what could be behind these medical miracles?

Spontaneous remission: Peter Crane's incurable blood cancer disappeared without any treatmentSpontaneous remission: Peter Crane’s incurable blood cancer disappeared without any treatment

Several reports, including a recent paper in the Netherlands Journal Of Medicine, have linked a significant number of spontaneous disappearances of leukaemia to fever caused by serious infections.

Now, scientists believe they understand how this might work. There are two theories: the first is that an infection serious enough to provoke a fever response can push the body’s immune system into a high-powered, hypersensitive state.

This helps the patient’s immune system detect the fact that cancer cells are subtly different from normal healthy cells. It then attacks the tumour cells as though they are infectious invaders.

In everyday life, our immune systems may wipe out many cancer cells unobtrusively, so we never know we were at risk. But, too often, such tumour cells can be sufficiently similar to normal ones that they sneak under the radar of a normally-running immune system and develop into serious cancers.

The other theory is that the high temperature itself attacks and destroys the cancer.

Tantalisingly, Jordan had a mild fever of 38.1c in the days before his clear scans. N ow scientists are trying to harness the power of fever and infection in a controlled way to treat cancer patients.

Researchers in Italy and the U.S., are using the food-poisoning bugs salmonella and listeria to provoke tumour-killing immune responses.

These bacteria are the chief culprits behind the estimated 850,000 cases of food poisoning each year in Britain, around 500 of which are lethal. But scientists are using modified forms of the bacteria that do not cause illness itself.

These are attached to patients’ tumour cells in the laboratory, painting them as ‘enemies, which is then primed to begin detecting and killing all the tumour cells.

It’s hoped that the lab tests will soon be extended to patients themselves.

Food-poisoning bacteria are being used because the body is primed to recognise them and set off major alarms at their presence.

Maria Resign, of the European Institute of Oncology in Milan, is working with neutralised salmonella cells to alert the immune system to skin-cancer cells.

‘We did experiments first in mice and then in cancer cells and immune cells from human patients, and found that the salmonella was successfully doing exactly the same job in each case,’ she says. ‘Now we are ready to go into testing on humans, but we are waiting for authorisation from Italian regulators.’

Meanwhile, in the U.S., drug company Advaxis is doing similar work, using a bioengineered form of listeria, to activate the immune system to combat a broad array of cancers.

Cancer Research UK is helping to fund the company’s research trials. One clinical study is already under way, giving the listeria bug to women with cervical cancer. The use of food poisoning bugs is the latest attempt to develop a generation of cancer treatments called immunotherapy drugs – or ‘cancer vaccines’.

‘We know that cancers do sometimes regress when the immune system is stimulated by an infection’

The idea is to recruit the body’s own immune system to fight tumours. In April, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first immune-stimulating vaccine to treat tumours – Provenge is designed to prime the body’s defences to attack prostate cancer.

Another experimental immunotherapy drug, Ipilimumab, is being developed by Bristol-Myers Squibb. It showed some positive results in fighting melanoma in a June trial. Such therapies are still a way off becoming mainstream medicines, but Peter Johnson, chief clinician at Cancer Research UK, is optimistic.

‘We are starting to see evidence that this may be a sensible approach to treating cancers,’ he says. ‘We know that cancers do sometimes regress when the immune system is stimulated by an infection.’

‘The complicated challenge for researchers is to work out how you can give a broad stimulus to the immune system and achieve a very specific response – a targeted attack on tumour molecules.

‘But we are now seeing, in some cases at least, this kind of thing being achieved with drugs such as Ipilimumab.’

This and other work is also throwing up a fascinating explanation for the spiralling numbers of cancers nowadays; it could be that our immune systems are less on the alert as – thanks to antibiotics, vaccinations and improved hygiene – we have far fewer infections.

Indeed, now some doctors have gone so far as to suggest we should intentionally create fevers in cancer patients. Professor Heinz-Uwe Hobohm, of Berlin’s Technical University of Applied Sciences, recently called for controlled fever to be used as part of chemotherapy regimens.

It may kick-start the body to kick out tumours without patients having to take cancer-vaccine drugs.

‘Today we should be able to induce and control fever much better than 100 years ago,’ he wrote in the British Journal Of Cancer. In fact, in the U.S., Dr Joan Bull, a pioneering oncologist at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Centre in Houston, is already heating cancer patients’ bodies to boost the immune system.

‘We’re using a temperature you would get with a bad case of the flu,’ says Dr Bull.

Two days after having chemotherapy and immune-boosting drugs, patients are put into an infra-red ‘total-body thermal therapy’ enclosure nicknamed the ‘hot box’, for eight hours under sedation.

Their temperature is carefully monitored as it is raised from just under 37c to 40c. ‘The fever is giving a startle, a cry for help to the immune system to say, arm yourself, get out here, do something,’ Dr Bull says.

She believes if the heat can wake up the immune system, her team can use less chemotherapy and reduce the side-effects which such strong drugs can wreak. Dr Bull is using the experimental therapy on patients with hard-totreat pancreatic cancers and smallcell lung cancers.

‘Whole-body fever-range thermal therapy is a gentler therapy than using radiotherapy, which can hit a lot of the body’s vital structures,’ she says. ‘The fever itself is safe; the patient is sedated, not because it hurts, but if you’ve ever had a fever, you know how crabby you get. We let them sleep.’

It’s not clear if baby Grace Woodhead or Peter Crane, like Jordan Harden, suffered a fever before their clear scan.

Yet whatever the explanation, Jordan’s parents are simply grateful to enjoy days that they never dared to dream they would experience, such as proudly seeing their boy off to school.

‘He has just started his first term,’ beams Garry. ‘You would not even know that there has ever been something wrong with him.’

Garry admits, however, that the shadow of cancer has not fully passed: ‘We still worry about him every day.

‘We have never got over the worry. But I think that’s natural in any parent who’s gone through this, even if his disease has ended in a miracle.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1313773/Can-fever-cure-cancer-Jordan-baffled-doctors-leukaemia-vanished-new-evidence-suggests-remarkable-explanation-.html#ixzz124BS5A7l

In the common cold, scientists find new hope for cancer treatment

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Posted 26 Aug 2010 — by James Street
Category genetic research, Virus



Posted by Laura Blue Thursday, August 26, 2010 at 5:34 pm
Submit a Comment • Related Topics: cancer medicine

New research on viruses may translate into new therapies to beat cancer, scientists say.

Molecular biologists at the Salk Institute have uncovered a previously unknown mechanism that allows adenoviruses – culprits behind the common cold as well as other illnesses — to beat the body’s immune system. Since adenoviruses and tumor growths both overcome our natural cellular defenses in a similar way, understanding one disease process can give us good clues for ways to fight the other, scientists hope.

Here’s how it works. Previous research has shown that the “p53″ protein is both a tumor suppressor, preventing cancer growth, and also important for keeping adenoviruses in check. When cancer invades one of the body’s cells, p53 will try to kill the cell outright to prevent the cell from being overrun. Adenoviruses also need to overcome p53 to replicate. Tumors and adenoviruses, therefore, have both adapted mechanisms of their own to knock out p53.

Scientists already knew about one mechanism by which adenoviruses can repress p53 function. But in the newly released research, published in the journal Nature, the Salk scientists analyzed adenoviruses with several induced mutations and discovered a second, previously unknown repressor of p53. That gives them a better idea of how adenoviruses overcome the body’s immune response to replicate successfully — and it hints at better ways to create new, genetically engineered viruses that would target and destroy tumors without otherwise causing harm to humans.

It sounds complicated. But Kevin Ryan, a molecular biologist and cancer researcher who was not involved with the study, explains why this finding is so important. Writing in an editorial published in the same journal issue as the original research, he says:

Undoubtedly, the greatest significance of this study will be its contribution to devising strategies to treat cancer. Adenoviruses must inactivate p53 so that they can replicate and subsequently induce the breakdown of the infected cell. Because many tumours lack p53 function, researchers have engineered viruses that lack E1B-55k [the previously known mechanism to wipe out p53] with the idea that these viruses would replicate selectively in tumour cells lacking p53 but not in normal cells, eventually leading to the death of the tumour cells.

In other words, scientists have already tried to engineer new viruses that would thrive only in tumors, killing off cancers. If cancer invades a healthy cell and wipes out the p53 function, then the lack of p53 allows the adenovirus to go in and take over the cell. With some genetic engineering to make sure that the adenovirus has no ability to repress p53 itself, the specially created virus should be of little threat to healthy cells — only a threat to the cancerous cells, where p53 function is suppressed.

Viruses like this have already been created. Ryan continues, however:

Although these engineered viruses have proven to be therapeutically beneficial, their replication does not seem to depend on the p53 ‘status’ of the cell.

They also weren’t as successful as treatments as people might have liked.

[The new] finding that [the second, newly uncovered p53 repressor] E4-ORF3 also, at least partly, inactivates p53 function provides an explanation for why this would be the case. Following on from these insights is the exciting prospect that adenoviruses lacking both [of the p53-blocking mechanisms] could be selective and even more potent anticancer agents than viruses lacking just E1B-55k.

Read more: http://wellness.blogs.time.com/2010/08/26/in-the-common-cold-scientists-find-new-hope-for-cancer-treatment/#ixzz0xmKrwIkM

Researchers Identify Potential Therapeutic Target In Osteosarcoma

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Posted 14 Aug 2010 — by James Street
Category Drugs, Proteomics, Virus

28 Feb 2009

A receptor known to be active in bone metastases, but previously unexplored in primary bone tumors, is a potential therapeutic target in osteosarcoma, investigators from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center report in the March 1 issue of Cancer Research.

The researchers found that the protein – interleukin-11 receptor alpha (IL-11Ra) – is highly expressed in primary osteosarcoma and in lung metastases from these tumors. Their research suggests the possibility of delivering therapeutic agents directly to osteosarcoma cells by targeting the receptor with circulating particles that display a peptide mimic of the natural ligand that binds IL-11Ra.

Osteosarcoma is the most common primary malignant tumor of bone. “Existing treatment has not changed the prognosis for osteosarcoma for the last 20 to 30 years,” said lead investigator Valerae O. Lewis, M.D., associate professor and chief of Orthopedic Oncology at M. D. Anderson. “About 30 percent of patients still relapse and die of their disease. New therapeutic strategies and agents are needed.”

The effectiveness of the current chemotherapy regimens for osteosarcoma is limited by toxic side effects, including damage to the heart and nerves, kidney failure and hearing loss, Lewis noted. Identification of a target specific for osteosarcoma cells opens the door for the development of therapies that can shut down the tumor cells without inflicting the collateral damage caused by conventional osteosarcoma treatments.

IL-11Ra is a target in bone metastasis; far less is known about its attributes, if any, in primary tumors of bone. To address IL-11Ra as a potential molecular target in osteosarcoma, the authors confirmed the protein expression and localization of IL-11Ra in several mouse and human osteosarcoma cell lines.

In an orthotopic mouse model of human osteosarcoma, the investigators found that the IL-11Ra not only was markedly present in the primary osteosarcoma and in its metastases but was absent from normal bone marrow and lungs.

To evaluate the accessibility of IL-11Ra as a target, the researchers intravenously administered small, virus-like particles called phages equipped with a peptide that mimics IL-11, the receptor’s natural ligand. After 24 hours in circulation, the ligand-directed particles were taken up in the tumors but showed little or no accumulation in several control organs.

“Connecting therapeutic agents to this ligand-directed system might result in improved, targeted drugs,” said co-senior author Renata Pasqualini, Ph.D., Professor of Medicine and Cancer Biology in the David H. Koch Center at M. D. Anderson.

“It is conceptually unexpected that a receptor would be over-expressed not only in metastatic tumors to bone but also in primary bone tumors; this is quite important because human osteosarcoma is a malignant tumor with very few targets at the protein level,” said co-senior author Wadih Arap, M.D, Ph.D., also Professor of Medicine and Cancer Biology in the David H. Koch Center.

Immunohistochemical staining analysis of IL-11Ra expression in primary and metastatic human osteosarcoma samples provided further evidence of the potential value of IL-11Ra as a therapeutic target. All primary human osteosarcoma samples exhibited moderate-to high-intensity staining of tumor cells. More than half of tumor blood vessels also showed moderate-to-high-intensity staining. All pulmonary metastases were positive for IL-11Ra expression, while normal, control lung tissue was negative.

“This indicates that therapeutic targeting of IL-11Ra may yield anti-tumor, anti-metastasis and anti-angiogenesis effects in osteosarcoma,” Lewis said.

Phase I trial of IL-11R for bone metastasis

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently issued “safe to proceed” status for an M. D. Anderson-sponsored investigational new drug based on a cell-death-inducing therapy directed at IL-11R. The drug is defined as BMTP-11 (Bone Metastasis Targeting Peptide 11). The first clinical trial, in which BMTP-11 will be evaluated in prostate cancer patients, will soon be activated.

Lewis noted that the research group has initiated pre-clinical studies to measure potential anti-tumor effects of BMTP-11 in osteosarcoma models. If successful, such efforts may lead to a rapid evolution of BMTP-11 toward the management of osteosarcoma.

Research was funded by an M. D. Anderson Institutional Research Grant and a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant to Lewis and grants from the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Department of Defense, the Gillson-Longenbaugh Foundation, and the Marcus Foundation, to Arap and Pasqualini.

Co-authors with Lewis, Arap and Pasqualini are Michael G. Ozawa, in the David H. Koch Center M. D. Anderson and an M.D./Ph.D. student in the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, operated jointly by The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and M. D. Anderson; Guiyang Wang, of the Department of Orthopedic Oncology; Michael T. Deavers, M.D. of M. D. Anderson’s Department of Pathology; and Tamaki Shintani, D.D.S., Ph.D., of M. D. Anderson’s Department of Radiation Oncology.

About M. D. Anderson

The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston ranks as one of the world’s most respected centers focused on cancer patient care, research, education and prevention. M. D. Anderson is one of only 41 Comprehensive Cancer Centers designated by the National Cancer Institute. For six of the past nine years, M. D. Anderson has ranked No. 1 in cancer care in “America’s Best Hospitals,” a survey published annually in U.S. News and World Report.

University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
1515 Holcombe Blvd., Box 229
Houston
TX 77030
United States
http://www.mdanderson.org


Article URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/140638.php

Main News Category: Cancer / Oncology

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