Washington
D.C. -- The first clinical trial of a biologic nanoparticle
designed to give back to cancer patients the tumor-busting
gene they have lost is expected to start in September
at Georgetown University Medical Center.
The phase I clinical study will enroll 20 patients
with advanced solid cancers (including most common
tumor types), and is the culmination of more than
a decade of work by a team of researchers led by
Professor Esther H. Chang, Ph.D. at the Lombardi
Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Their research has led to development of a tiny
structure -- measuring a millionth of an inch across
-- that resembles a virus particle that can penetrate
deeply into the tumor and move efficiently into cells.
The device is a "liposome" -- a microscopic globule
made of lipids -- that is spiked on the outside with
antibody molecules that will seek out, bind to, and
then enter cancer cells including metastases wherever
they hide in the body. These molecules bind to the
receptor for transferrin that is present in high
numbers on cancer cells.
Once inside, the nanoparticle, which the researchers
call a "immunolipoplex," will deliver its payload
-- the p53 gene whose protein helps to signal cells
to self-destruct when they have the kind of genetic
damage characterized by cancer and by cancer therapies.
More than half of all cancer patients have cancer
cells that have lost normal functioning of the p53
gene, so-called "guardian of the genome," and the
Georgetown researchers believe that restoring the
gene will improve the tumor-killing ability of traditional
treatments.
"We are excited about the promise this nanoparticle
has shown in animal tumor models, and are anxious
to offer it to patients," said Chang, Professor in
the Department of Oncology and Co-director of the
Molecular Targets & Developmental Therapeutics
Program at Georgetown.
The federal Food and Drug Administration granted
approval for the trial to begin in late July. The
work is being sponsored by grants from the National
Institutes of Health and private foundations. Additional
support comes from SynerGene Therapeutics, a biotech
research firm with which Chang collaborates.
John Marshall, M.D., Director of Developmental Therapeutics
and GI Oncology at Georgetown, will serve as the
trial's principal investigator.
The researchers believe that immunolipoplex represents
an advance over the viral "vectors" that have been
used to deliver gene therapy, because these liposomes
do not produce the kinds of immunologic response
seen when disabled viruses are used to carry the
payload. They also say that the nanoparticle is of
a small uniform size and consistency, and has been
proven to work in animals bearing tumor.
In preclinical research, Chang and long-term research
colleague Kathleen Pirollo, Ph.D. have found that
these nanoparticles substantially improve the tumor-fighting
power of both chemotherapy and radiation therapy.
These agents work synergistically with traditional
therapies because the newly restored p53 protein
helps push cancer cells that are now damaged to self-destruct.
"We believe this approach will make it difficult
for the cancer cells to become resistant to therapy," Chang
said. "As a result, cancers treated with these liposomal
formulations should be less likely to recur after
therapy is complete."
For example, use of these p53-loaded liposomes in
combination with radiation therapy eliminated prostate
and head and neck tumors in mice, which then survived
cancer-free for more than 200 days -- until they
all died of old age. Similar promising results were
seen when the nanoparticles were combined with chemotherapy
to treat animal models of melanoma and aggressive
breast cancer.
Among the solid tumors approved for testing in the
clinical trial are head and neck, prostate, pancreatic,
breast, bladder, colon, cervical, brain, melanoma,
liver and lung cancers.
Contact: Laura Cavender
lsc6@georgetown.edu
202-687-5100
Georgetown University Medical Center
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