Connect with us

Government

From tragedy, a new potential cancer treatment

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a lethal pediatric brain cancer that often kills within a year of diagnosis. Surgery is almost impossible because…

Published

on

This article was originally published by BioEngineering

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a lethal pediatric brain cancer that often kills within a year of diagnosis. Surgery is almost impossible because of the tumors’ location. Chemotherapy has debilitating side effects. New treatment options are desperately needed.

Glioma Stains

Credit: Krainer lab/Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a lethal pediatric brain cancer that often kills within a year of diagnosis. Surgery is almost impossible because of the tumors’ location. Chemotherapy has debilitating side effects. New treatment options are desperately needed.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Professor Adrian Krainer is best known for his groundbreaking research on antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs)—molecules that can control protein levels in cells. His efforts led to Spinraza®, the first FDA-approved treatment for a deadly neurodegenerative disease called spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).

Following his success with SMA, Krainer started looking into other diseases where ASOs could make a difference. He soon set his sights on DIPG. “I was contacted by a neurologist and his friend, who had lost her child to DIPG,” Krainer says. “They called to ask if what we did for SMA could be applied. Of course, every disease has its own barriers and obstacles, but it seemed doable. We thought it might be possible to develop a therapy.”

Now, Krainer, graduate student Qian Zhang, and their colleagues have developed a potential therapeutic for DIPG using ASO technology similar to that in Spinraza. This new therapy slowed tumor growth, reversed certain changes in cancer cells, and increased survival rates in mice with DIPG. Krainer’s SMA research laid the foundation for this work.

“While working on Spinraza, we learned how to deliver ASOs to the spinal cord and brain,” he explains. “They have long-lasting effects there. So, we knew there was potential for treating other diseases.”

The new ASO drug works by shutting down a mutated protein called H3.3K27M. In DIPG, the dominant mutation blocks closely related proteins from turning many genes on and off. This leads to uncontrolled cell growth—cancer. When the team used the ASO drug on mice with DIPG, the genes it affected returned to normal. The tumors stopped growing as fast, and the animals lived longer.

“After treatment, the cancer looked very different,” says Krainer. “We could see a lot fewer proliferating cells, and the tumor cells were differentiating into healthy nerve cells. That tells us DIPG’s malignant changes are reversible to an extent.”

While hopeful, Krainer says there is still a long way to go before this new therapeutic can begin clinical trials. Additionally, the potential drug would likely need to be paired with another treatment like radiation or immunotherapy.

“Certainly, we would like this to make it to clinical studies,” he says, “but we didn’t put all our cards into one approach. We’re exploring ways to make this even more effective.”

 




clinical trials

Psychedelics

Here Are the Champions! Our Top Performing Stories in 2023

It has been quite a year – not just for the psychedelic industry, but also for humanity as a whole. Volatile might not be the most elegant word for it,…

Continue Reading
Medtech

AI can already diagnose depression better than a doctor and tell you which treatment is best

Artificial intelligence (AI) shows great promise in revolutionizing the diagnosis and treatment of depression, offering more accurate diagnoses and predicting…

Continue Reading
Government

Scientists use organoid model to identify potential new pancreatic cancer treatment

A drug screening system that models cancers using lab-grown tissues called organoids has helped uncover a promising target for future pancreatic cancer…

Continue Reading

Trending