Potential New Target for Brain Tumor Therapy Identified
By Biotechdaily staff writers
Posted on 21 May 2007
A drug that targets the body's immune cells may be effective in treating malignant brain tumors, according to a new study.Posted on 21 May 2007
The study was conducted by researchers from Duke University's (Durham, NC, USA) Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center. In animal models, the drug re-engaged the body's cancer-damaged immune system. "We were effectively targeting ‘bad' T cells that can damage the immune system if their numbers are too high, and ‘good' T cells that help create an immune response to things like infections and tumors,” said John Sampson, M.D., Ph.D., a neurosurgeon at Duke and senior investigator on the study. "We found that this drug was able to stop the bad cells in their tracks by giving the good ones a type of bulletproof jacket.”
The researchers hypothesized that patients with a restored immune system will be better prepared to fight off brain tumors. They hope to start a clinical trial soon. The study's findings hold promise for the development of vaccines that can work against tumors by enlisting the help of the body's immune system, according to Dr. Sampson.
T cells are white blood cells that play an important role in the body's immune system. Regulatory T cells help maintain immune balance, therefore, they are responsible for tamping down an immune response after the body has fought off a foreign invader, such as an infection. But patients with brain tumors frequently have too many regulatory T cells, rendering their immune systems ineffective in fighting off tumors.
By contrast, cytotoxic T cells, which act to destroy infection and tumor cells, are frequently depleted in individuals with brain tumors, enabling the tumor cells to grow and spread uncontrollably. Those cytoxic T cells that remain can be insufficient because of the increased number of regulatory T cells, according to Dr. Sampson.
"We speculated that this drug, which has been used successfully to treat other types of cancer such as melanoma and prostate cancer, might be effective in treating tumors that originate in the brain as well,” said Peter Fecci, Ph.D., a medical student at Duke and lead investigator on the study.
The identification of T cells as targets for this drug was first made by study co-author James Allison, Ph.D., from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (New York, NY, USA), who then went on to demonstrate the effectiveness of the drug in pre-clinical models of other types of cancer.
For this study, the researchers discovered that the drug, which targets a molecule called CTLA-4 that is found on both types of T cells, could stop the effects of the bad T cells, which inhibit the immune response, by making the good T cells more resistant to them, thereby helping the immune system fight the brain tumor, according to Dr. Fecci.
"Brain tumors can be especially challenging because these patients have such high levels of regulatory T calls, and also because many drugs are not able to permeate the blood-brain barrier,” Dr. Fecci said. "We are encouraged by these results because this drug has a restorative effect on the immune system and doesn't need to get into the brain to be effective.”
The animal also did not demonstrate symptoms of autoimmunity, a condition in which the immune system attacks the body, which can be a side effect of drugs that target immune cells. The Duke researchers are now in the process of initiating a clinical trial to test the effectiveness of the drug in humans. "This dual-pronged approach that targets both types of cells holds great promise,” Dr. Sampson said. "We hope that it will soon lead to more effective treatments for people diagnosed with these deadly brain tumors.”
The researchers published their findings in the April 1, 2007, issue of the journal Clinical Cancer Research.
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