(Press-News.org) Targeted cancer cell therapies using man-made proteins dramatically shrink many tumors in the first few months of treatment, but new research from Johns Hopkins scientists finds why the cells all too often become resistant, the treatment stops working, and the disease returns.
In a study of 28 advanced colon cancer patients treated with the monoclonal antibody panitumumab, the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center team reports that drug-resistance tumor cell mutations appear in the blood of patients five to seven months later, and that low levels of these mutations exist in nearly all tumors before the therapy begins, making the cancers predestined to recur.
"These resistance mutations develop by chance as cancer cells divide so that tumors always contain thousands of resistance cells," says Luis Diaz, M.D., associate professor of oncology and director of the Swim Across America laboratory at Johns Hopkins, who says the findings likely apply to any targeted cancer therapy.
"The best chance for a cure is when a tumor is very small, but when the cancer is advanced, our research quantifies the probability that we can achieve cures with single-agent targeted therapies," says Bert Vogelstein, M.D., professor and co-director of the Ludwig Center at Johns Hopkins and, Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "Long-term remissions of advanced cancers will be nearly impossible with single targeted agents," he adds.
The Johns Hopkins scientists analyzed blood samples taken from 28 patients with advanced colorectal cancers. These patients were enrolled in a clinical trial of panitumumab, one of a new and growing class of monoclonal antibodies, or synthetic proteins that homes in on cancer cells' vital growth pathways. In the case of panitumumab, the agent targets a growth-factor receptor called EGFR. Patients most likely to respond to the drug also have normal copies of the KRAS gene in their tumors.
Twenty-four of the 28 patients in the study had normal KRAS gene copies in their tumors, and four had mutations in KRAS, serving as a control group. Blood samples were taken before beginning the therapy and at four-week intervals during the therapy, for a total of 169 combined blood draws.
Virtually all cancers shed DNA material into the blood, according to the researchers, and provide an easy route to collecting molecular evidence from lesions typically inaccessible for surgical biopsy. "The amount of tumor DNA found in the blood is akin to tests used to determine HIV viral load," says Diaz.
In their analysis, reported online June 13 in the journal Nature, the scientists found that nine of the 24 patients with normal KRAS genes (38 percent) exhibited KRAS mutations detectable in the blood within five to seven months of beginning therapy. KRAS mutations were detected in three patients before imaging scans showed metastatic tumor growth. Then, working with Martin Nowak, Ph.D., and his team from Harvard University, the investigators used mathematical models to calculate when KRAS mutations likely originated. Nowak and colleagues determined that KRAS mutations were present prior to the initiation of treatment with panitumumab.
"The probability that the mutations were absent at the beginning of treatment is exceedingly low," says Vogelstein, leading the team to conclude that the development of drug-resistance is a fait accompli. The time it takes for cancers to recur is determined simply by how long it takes cancer cells with mutant genes to multiply, he adds.
The research team says that combination therapies are the best chance for longer remissions. "The good news is that there is a limited number of pathways that go awry in cancer, so it should be possible to develop a small number of agents that can be used in a large number of patients," says Vogelstein. "However, I hope this research will help stimulate the testing of new drugs as combination therapies much earlier in the drug approval process than the current norm."
INFORMATION:
The research was funded by the Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research, the National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance, Swim Across America, and National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants (CA43460, CA57345, CA62924, N01-CN-43309 and CA006973).
Other scientists involved in the research include Isaac Kinde, Jian Wu and Kenneth W. Kinzler from Johns Hopkins, Richard Williams and Kelly S. Oliner from Amgen Inc., Randolf Hecht from UCLA, Jordan Berlin from Vanderbilt University, and Benjamin Allen, Ivana Bozic, and Johanness Reiter from Harvard University.
END
New patients can now receive expedited visits at Northfield Dental Group with the introduction of new patient forms available online for easy download. Dr. Ivan Stein, New Jersey top dentist, has provided these online forms in order to further provide patients with more one-on-one time once in the office.
Patients can visit the website for Northfield Dental Group by visiting http://www.northfielddentalgroup.com. By accessing the website, patients can visit the "New Patients" tab from the homepage where they will gain instant access to the new patient forms. ...
A scientist from Nanyang Technological University (NTU) may be onto an ocean of discovery because of his research into a little sea creature called the mantis shrimp.
The research is likely to lead to making ceramics – today's preferred material for medical implants and military body armour – many times stronger. These findings were published in last Friday's Science, the world's top scientific journal, and focused on the mantis shrimp's ability to shatter aquarium glass and crab shells alike.
The common creature native to the Indo Pacific, has club-like 'arms' which ...
This enzyme is also involved in other conditions as inflammatory bowel disease or rheumatoid arthritis, as well as in neurodegenerative conditions as Huntington's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
University of Granada researchers have tested melatonin analogues in rats as it inhibits the enzyme nitric oxide synthase (NOS), which is involved in the development of conditions as inflammatory bowel disease, septic shock or rheumatoid arthritis, as well as in neurodegenerative conditions as Huntington's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and amyotrophic ...
Global climate change is expected to cause sea-level rise of approximately 1-2 meters within this century and studies are beginning to project the consequences for humans and global biodiversity. While the direct consequences of sea-level rise due to flooding and inundation ('primary effects') are beginning to be assessed, no studies have yet considered the possible secondary effects from sea-level rise due to the relocation of human refugees into the hinterland. Researchers from the Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology of the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, ...
Leading Mansfield dentists, Drs. Irving, Curtis and Stephenson, are taking steps to make sure every patient is comfortable when visiting Irving, Stephenson & Curtis DDS. To do so, Dr. Curtis, dentist in Mansfield, and his team of dental professionals are providing patients with easy online access to before-and-after photos via the practice website before making the decision to receive their individual treatment.
Prior to their procedures, patients can visit the website for Irving, Stephenson & Curtis DDS to explore photos of previous procedures that have been ...
An international team of scientists have published the first continent-wide assessment of the Antarctic's biogeography, and propose that the landmass should be divided into 15 distinct conservation regions to protect the continent from invasive alien species. The team's findings are published in Diversity and Distributions, while the authors' proposals were outlined today at a lecture to the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting (ATCM) in Hobart, Tasmania.
The study, led by Australian Antarctic Division terrestrial biologist Dr Aleks Terauds, examined the geography, geology, ...
Theories of the primordial Universe predict the existence of knots in the fabric of space - known as cosmic textures - which could be identified by looking at light from the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the relic radiation left over from the Big Bang.
Using data from NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) satellite, researchers from UCL, Imperial College London and the Perimeter Institute have performed the first search for textures on the full sky, finding no evidence for such knots in space.
As the Universe cooled it underwent a series of phase transitions, ...
Dr. Bryant Aiken, Cleburne family dentist, is now offering an educational library and videos via the practice's newly developed website. The library and videos were created to allow patients to access reliable dental information around the clock while encouraging exceptional dental care for healthier teeth and gums. Dental topics include tooth decay, periodontal disease, preventative care and oral surgery in Cleburne, among other topics.
"It is important that our patients understand the care they are receiving before they come into our office. Through the educational ...
This application yields a prediction of urban noise levels using a dataset (street type, road conditions, average speed of the vehicles passing by, road works, etc), with a reliability of 95%.
University of Granada researchers have designed a new software solution to determine noise levels in a street in the future. This new system predicts noise frequency and the type of noise that the inhabitants of a neighborhood will have to endure. This information is of great interest to people interested in buying a new house.
This system is more accurate than the traditional ...
"Climate change and the associated change of water availability are facts and will require partly significant adaptation," emphasize Ha-rald Kunstmann and Christof Lorenz of Karlsruhe Institute of Tech-nology, who are the authors of the said study. "This is the reason why we have to better understand interactions of evaporation, clouds, and precipitation also on the regional level." To check the reliability of various global analyses, the hydrologists and climate researchers reevaluated three of the most modern global coupled atmosphere and ocean models with respect to ...