25 Haziran 2012 Pazartesi

Improving treatment of chronic pain in cats

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Winn grant W12-027
Development of outcome assessment instruments for chronic pain in cats
Investigator: Dorothy Cimino Brown; University of Pennsylvania

Cats are unique. They cannot benefit from the same pain fighting medications used in dogs, because they can cause serious side-effects in cats. It is crucially important that we identify pain fighting medications that are safe and effective in cats, so that we can relieve them from pain caused by such conditions as arthritis or cancer. Once a treatment option for pain is identified that might be useful in cats, studies must be carefully designed in order to prove that the potential new treatment option is effective. The greatest obstacle to designing such studies is the fact that we have not developed reliable ways to measure pain in cats. If we can not measure the pain, we can not prove that we are appropriately treating it. 

An.Old.CatThe goal of this study is to develop tools that can measure pain in cats and therefore appropriately design studies that will identify new treatments. The first tool is the Feline Brief Pain Inventory, which will be an owner completed questionnaire that will allow them to identify and report on how their cat behaves at home, focusing on the behaviors that are related to pain. The second tool is an activity monitor that can be worn on the cat’s collar while it progresses through its normal activities at home. We plan to identify how many days the monitor needs to be worn to collect data reliably. Ultimately the monitor might identify the improved activity that can be related to adequate pain control.

This project is available for sponsorship. When you sponsor a project, your name will be added to the list of the project's supporters on our website and in any publications we produce about the project. You will receive exclusive pre-publication reports on the progress of your chosen project as they become available, and a final report at its conclusion.

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New feline virus identified

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Lau SK, Woo PC, Yip CC, et al. Identification of a novel feline picornavirus from the domestic cat. J Virol. 2012; 86: 395-405.

Picornaviruses are small viruses infecting many animal species as well as humans. This family of viruses includes many important human and veterinary pathogens including the common cold virus, poliovirus, and foot and mouth disease virus. Thus far, picornaviruses infecting cats have not been identified. 

Hong Kong catThe investigators screened fecal, urine, blood, and nasopharyngeal swab samples from over 600 cats in Hong Kong over a 3-year period for picornavirus using genetic detection methods. They found a novel virus which after characterization was found to be most closely related to but distinct from all known picornaviruses. Their findings indicated that infection of cats with this virus was quite common. While the cats tested in this study were all apparently healthy, further research is required to fully understand the significance of this virus among cats. [MK]

Related articles: Santti J, Vainionpaa R, Hyypia T. Molecular detection and typing of human picornaviruses. Virus Res. 1999; 62: 177-83.

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Inherited blindness in Bengal cats

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Winn grant W12-022
Molecular characterization of Bengal progressive retinal atrophy
Investigator: Robert A. Grahn; University of California, Davis
 
Inherited blindness is a devastating disease common to many species. In people, over 25 different forms of inherited retinal blindness have been clinically characterized. Cats also have several forms of blindness that destroy the photoreceptors at the back of the eye. These conditions will randomly occur in a particular cat breed and then will be inherited. Some forms of blindness attack the photoreceptors shortly after birth, while other forms take longer to destroy vision. Several Bengal cats have been diagnosed with a form of blindness that destroys their vision at around 5 months of age. A genome wide association case control study has indicated a candidate region for a possible mutation causing progressive retinal atrophy in the Bengal breed. This proposal will obtain the sequence of the RNA and DNA of this candidate gene to identify the mutation and allow for development of a genetic test to help reduce the prevalence of the disease in the Bengal breed.
This study has received partial funding from Winn according to our guidelines for breed-specific projects. Please donate so that the project may be fully funded.

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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the Sphynx cat

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Silverman SJ, Stern JA, Meurs KM. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the Sphynx cat: A retrospective evaluation of clinical presentation and heritable etiology. J Feline Med Surg 2012;14:246-249.

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common form of heart disease in the cat. HCM is a heritable disease in some breeds of cats such as the Maine Coon and Ragdoll. Distinct causative mutations have been found in these breeds and there may be other clinical presentations. This suggests that HCM In cats is a diverse disease. The Sphynx breed has been reported to have a predilection for HCM. The records of 18 cats (11 female, 7 male) were evaluated for characteristics of HCM and for a familial etiology. The age range of affected cats was 0.5 to 7 years (median, 2 years). The results indicate a familial disease, at least in some cases, with multiple (four) affected cats occurring within one family. The mode of inheritance suggests an autosomal dominant trait similar to that of the Maine Coon, though a prospective breeding project would be needed to determine the exact mode. The age of onset appears to be younger in Sphynx than other cat breeds studied. Further studies are warranted to evaluate for a causative mutation. [VT]

Winn has recently funded grant W12-009: Fine mapping for Sphynx cat hypertrophic cardiomyopathy gene.

Related articles: Meurs KM, Norgard MM, Kuan M, et al. Analysis of 8 sarcomeric candidate genes for feline hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutations in cats with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. J Vet Intern Med 2009;23:840-843. 

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Let's immune system help

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Imatinib potentiates antitumor T cell responses in gastrointestinal stromal tumor through the inhibition of Ido, 
Vinod P Balachandran, et al. Nature Medicine17 (2011) 


I would like to hilight this paper to our readership, as many of your are involved in the design of clinical trials and selection of potential biomarkers. This report is one of a handful of high impact papers that report the coperative role that inflammatory infiltrate and non cell autonomous effectors play in modulating response to established agents. This study demonstrates an interesting immunological mechanism of Imatininb  that contributes to the antitumor effect in a Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor (GIST) mouse model. Inflammatory infiltrate is a known finding in GIST specimens (including intratumoral CD8+ Tcells, Treg cells and macrophages). Acording to the authors, Imatinib activates CD8+ T cells and induces Treg cells apoptosis within the tumor. Imatinib is therefore able to reduce the expression of 2,3-dioxygenase (Ido) of tumor cells. Ido enzyme is involved in the catayzation of immunosuppressive metabolites from tryptophan and therefore mediates downstream immunological response. Interestingly Imatininb resistant tumors, generally as a result of a second KIT mutation, restore the overexpression of IDO and combination of Imatinib with CTLA-4 blockade (a well established immunotherapeutic strategy) act synergistically. This insight provides some hints on something we have been suspecting for a long time. It is easy to predict consequences for rational design of combination therapies and strategies to overcome resistance in Imatinib resistant tumors.TweetShare

24 Haziran 2012 Pazar

Treatment of blood clots in cats with heart disease

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Each year, the Winn Feline Foundation receives proposals from veterinary researchers around the world who are interested in improving feline health. To date, Winn’s cumulative total in feline health research funding exceeds $4 million. Forty-four proposals were submitted by researchers seeking funding in this review cycle. This year, our team of veterinary consultants helped Winn select 10 projects for funding, for a total of $174,018. Here is one of those projects:

W12-037
The efficacy of bosentan, a mixed ETa ETb receptor antagonist, in cats with arterial thromboembolismInvestigators: Elizabeth Rozanski, Gareth Buckley; Tufts University
A Ricky Fund Project
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a very common heart disease in cats. One of the most devastating complications of heart disease is development of blood clots called feline aortic thromboembolism (ATE), which cuts off the blood supply to one or more limbs. ATE is associated with a survival rate of less than 40% despite multiple efforts to try to improve outcomes. It is important to cats and their owners to be able to offer an intervention that improves survival with a good quality of life. Cats are recognized to have “reactive” blood vessels, and this response may worsen the outcome in ATE. The arteries in cats suffering from ATE will release various chemicals including one called endothelin. Endothelin causes an increased tendency to form more clots, and promotes severe inflammation and narrowing of collateral vessels supplying areas behind the site of the clot. Bosentan is a drug used successfully in people to treat various diseases such as coronary artery disease. This study looks to determine the effectiveness of bosentan in the treatment of cats with ATE.
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Improving treatment of cancer in cats

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Each year, the Winn Feline Foundation receives proposals from veterinary researchers around the world who are interested in improving feline health. To date, Winn’s cumulative total in feline health research funding exceeds $4 million. Forty-four proposals were submitted by researchers seeking funding in this review cycle. This year, our team of veterinary consultants helped Winn select 10 projects for funding, for a total of $174,018. Here is one of those projects:

W12-005
Immunohistochemical quantification of the transcobalamin II protein (TCII) and receptor (TCII-R) in naturally occurring feline tumors
Investigators: Annette M. Sysel, Joseph A. Bauer; Bauer Research Foundation, Akron OH

Cancer affects millions of cats annually and may account for 1/3 of all disease-related feline deaths. There are only 2 FDA-approved drugs available for the treatment of cancer in animals, but both drugs are licensed exclusively for use in dogs. Treatment of cancer in cats is largely extrapolated from treatments used in human and canine medicine. A new and interesting approach to cancer therapy is based on the fact that cancer cells rely on vitamin B12 (cobalamin) to grow and they produce transport proteins to scavenge cobalamin. An anti-tumor drug called nitrosylcobalamin (NO-Cbl) uses cobalamin to target cancer cells via the transcobalamin II (TCII) transport protein and receptors. The TCII protein and receptors have been evaluated in human and canine tumors, but not yet in cats. In this project, the investigators will quantify the TCII protein and receptor in feline tumors with the goal of identifying tumors that may be susceptible to treatment with drugs such as No-Cbl.

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Cryptosporidium infection in cats with FeLV or FIV

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de Oliveira Lemos F, Almosny NP, Soares AMB, et al. Cryptosporidium species screening using Kinyoun technique in domestic cats with diarrhea. J Feline Med Surg 2012;14:113-117.
C. parvum oocysts

Cryptosporidium is an obligate coccidian that can cause diarrhea. Transmission is primarily through ingestion of contaminated water, though contaminated food and direct contact with animals and contaminated surfaces also can be source of infection. In immune competent animals, infection can be self-limiting. Infection can become severe and chronic in immune compromised patients. Generally, C. felis is a subclinical infection in cats but infection by C. parvum may lead to diarrhea. A common cause of immune suppression in cats is retrovirus infection. This study looked at whether cats infected by a retrovirus are more susceptible to Cryptosporidium infection and whether they exhibit more severe clinical signs. Blood and fecal samples were collected from 60 cats and evaluated for Cryptosporidium and for feline leukemia virus (FeLV) antigen and feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) antibody by ELISA testing. Five cats were found to be shedding oocysts. Of these five cats, four were FeLV positive and one was both FeLV and FIV negative. The cats that were FeLV positive had more severe and chronic diarrhea with a larger number of oocysts, while the FeLV/FIV negative cat had a self-limiting diarrhea. [VT]

See also: Scorza V, Tangtrongsup S. Update on the diagnosis and management of Cryptosporidium spp infections in dogs and cats. Top Companion Anim Med 2010;25:163-169.

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Hyperthyroidism and kidney disease in cats

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Progress report, Winn grant 09-013
Identification of a biomarker for masked renal failure in hyperthyroid cats
Investigator: Thomas Schermerhorn, Kansas State University and collaborators
 
These researchers are trying to improve diagnosis and prognosis of cats with both hyperthyroidism and kidney disease, two common ailments of aging cats. Often, hyperthyroidism masks underlying kidney disease until it is revealed during treatment. The investigators are attempting to define a method for identifying the kidney disease before treatment of hyperthyroidism. This would improve the well-being of the cat as well as its life expectancy. To do this, they are analyzing the urine of hyperthyroid cats using a cutting-edge technique to identify literally thousands of urine components to see if any correlate with post-treatment appearance of kidney disease.

It has been a challenge acquiring sufficient numbers of cases of cats with hyperthyroidism able to participate in the study. Despite this, analysis is ongoing. To date, no identifiable correlate with renal disease has been found. However, the urine composition of hyperthyroid cats has been determined at a much more detailed level, which may allow future diagnosis of this condition via a simple urine test. [MK]

See also: Riensche MR, Graves TK, Schaeffer DJ. An investigation of predictors of renal insufficiency following treatment of hyperthyroidism in cats. J Feline Med Surg 2008;10:160-166.

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Let's immune system help

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Imatinib potentiates antitumor T cell responses in gastrointestinal stromal tumor through the inhibition of Ido, 
Vinod P Balachandran, et al. Nature Medicine17 (2011) 


I would like to hilight this paper to our readership, as many of your are involved in the design of clinical trials and selection of potential biomarkers. This report is one of a handful of high impact papers that report the coperative role that inflammatory infiltrate and non cell autonomous effectors play in modulating response to established agents. This study demonstrates an interesting immunological mechanism of Imatininb  that contributes to the antitumor effect in a Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor (GIST) mouse model. Inflammatory infiltrate is a known finding in GIST specimens (including intratumoral CD8+ Tcells, Treg cells and macrophages). Acording to the authors, Imatinib activates CD8+ T cells and induces Treg cells apoptosis within the tumor. Imatinib is therefore able to reduce the expression of 2,3-dioxygenase (Ido) of tumor cells. Ido enzyme is involved in the catayzation of immunosuppressive metabolites from tryptophan and therefore mediates downstream immunological response. Interestingly Imatininb resistant tumors, generally as a result of a second KIT mutation, restore the overexpression of IDO and combination of Imatinib with CTLA-4 blockade (a well established immunotherapeutic strategy) act synergistically. This insight provides some hints on something we have been suspecting for a long time. It is easy to predict consequences for rational design of combination therapies and strategies to overcome resistance in Imatinib resistant tumors.TweetShare

23 Haziran 2012 Cumartesi

Dental Did You Know: Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Children

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The prevalence of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (associated with oxygen desaturation, gas exchange abnormalities and disrupted sleep) is 2-4% in children with at a peak incidence occurring at 2-8 years old.

Hans Skariah, B.Sc., DMD
Promenade Court Dental Health Group in Mississauga
2233 Hurontario St., Mississauga, ON, Canada
(1/2 km north of the QEW in the Dome Building)
(905) 273-7100

Are we ready for personalized cancer treatments?

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I'm not sure this has the potential to become the standard of care anytime soon. However the challenge is there and most likely worth a try.What are the current limiting factors for this approach?- Cost (but despite the fact it is so evident, I believe it is not the main one)- Trial Design for personalized therapies; how can we prove those therapies are effective?- Facilities, how many cancer centers are TRULY ready to accomodate routine processing and biobanking of primary cell lines or xenograft?- What's first? Whole exome seq or In Vitro drug response?

Mol Cancer Ther. 2010 Dec 6. [Epub ahead of print]

Personalizing cancer treatment in the age of global genomic analyses: PALB2 gene mutations and the response to DNA damaging agents in pancreatic cancer.

Villarroel MC, Rajesh Kumar NV, Garrido-Laguna I, De Jesus-Acosta A, Jones S, Maitra A, Hruban RH, Eshleman JR, Klein AP, Laheru D, Donehower RC, Hidalgo M.1GI Oncology, The Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins.

Abstract

Metastasis and drug resistance are the major causes of mortality in patients with pancreatic cancer. Once developed, the progression of pancreatic cancer metastasis is virtually unstoppable with current therapies. Here we report the remarkable clinical outcome of a patient with advanced, gemcitabine-resistant, pancreatic cancer who was later treated with DNA damaging agents, based on the observation of significant activity of this class of drugs against a personalized xenograft generated from the patient's surgically resected tumor. Mitomycin C treatment, selected based on its robust preclinical activity in a personalized xenograft generated from the patient's tumor, resulted in long lasting (36+ months) tumor response. Global geneomic sequencing revealed biallelic inactivation of the gene encoding PalB2 protein in this patient's cancer, the mutation is predicted to disrupt BRCA1 and BRCA2 interactions critical to DNA double strand break repair. This work suggests that inactivation of the PALB2 gene is a determinant of response to DNA damage in pancreatic cancer and a new target for personalizing cancer treatment. Integrating personalized xenografts with unbiased exomic sequencing led to customize therapy, tailored to the genetic environment of patient's tumor and identification of a new biomarker of drug response in a lethal cancer.TweetShare

Aberrant Overexpression of Satellite Repeats in Pancreatic and Other Epithelial Cancers

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  • From Science


    1. David T. Ting1,*, 
    2. Doron Lipson2,*, 
    3. Suchismita Paul1
    4. Brian W. Brannigan
    5. Sara Akhavanfard1
    6. Erik J. Coffman1,
    7. Gianmarco Contino1
    8. Vikram Deshpande1
    9. A. John Iafrate1
    10. Stan Letovsky2
    11. Miguel N. Rivera1
    12. Nabeel Bardeesy1,
    13. Shyamala Maheswaran1 and 
    14. Daniel A. Haber1,3,


  • Satellite repeats in heterochromatin are transcribed into noncoding RNAs that have been linked to gene silencing and maintenance of chromosomal integrity. Using digital gene expression analysis, we show that these transcripts are greatly overexpressed in mouse and human epithelial cancers. In 8 of 10 mouse pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDAC), pericentromeric satellites accounted for a mean 12% (range 1 to 50%) of all cellular transcripts, a mean 40-fold increase over normal tissue. In 15/15 human PDACs, alpha satellite transcripts were most abundant and HSATII transcripts were highly specific for cancer. Similar patterns were observed in cancers of lung, kidney, ovary, colon, and prostate. Derepression of satellite transcripts correlated with overexpression of the LINE-1 retrotransposon and with aberrant expression of neuroendocrine-associated genes proximal to LINE-1 insertions. The overexpression of satellite transcripts in cancer may reflect global alterations in heterochromatin silencing and could potentially be useful as a biomarker for cancer detection.TweetShare

    Pancreatic cancers require autophagy for tumor growth

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    Yang S, Wang X*, Contino G*, Liesa M, Sahin E, Ying H, Bause A, Li Y, Stommel JM, Dell'antonio G, Mautner J, Tonon G, Haigis M, Shirihai OS, Doglioni C, Bardeesy N, Kimmelman AC.

    1. 1Division of Genomic Stability and DNA Repair, Department of Radiation Oncology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA;
    2. 2Cancer Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA;
    3. 3Division of General Surgery, European Institute of Oncology, University of Milan, 20141 Milan, Italy;
    4. 4Department of Medicine, Obesity Research Center, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118, USA;
    5. 5Department of Medical Oncology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA;
    6. 6Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 021145, USA;
    7. 7Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 021145, USA;
    8. 8Department of Pathology, San Raffaele del Monte Tabor Scientific Institute, 20132 Milan, Italy;
    9. 9Helmholtz-Zentrum and Technische Universität München, D-81377 München, Germany;
    10. 10Division of Molecular Oncology, San Raffaele del Monte Tabor Scientific Institute, 20132 Milan, Italy11 These authors contributed equally to this work.

    Abstract

    Macroautophagy (autophagy) is a regulated catabolic pathway to degrade cellular organelles and macromolecules. The role of autophagy in cancer is complex and may differ depending on tumor type or context. Here we show that pancreatic cancers have a distinct dependence on autophagy. Pancreatic cancer primary tumors and cell lines show elevated autophagy under basal conditions. Genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of autophagy leads to increased reactive oxygen species, elevated DNA damage, and a metabolic defect leading to decreased mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Together, these ultimately result in significant growth suppression of pancreatic cancer cells in vitro. Most importantly, inhibition of autophagy by genetic means or chloroquine treatment leads to robust tumor regression and prolonged survival in pancreatic cancer xenografts and genetic mouse models. These results suggest that, unlike in other cancers where autophagy inhibition may synergize with chemotherapy or targeted agents by preventing the up-regulation of autophagy as a reactive survival mechanism, autophagy is actually required for tumorigenic growth of pancreatic cancers de novo, and drugs that inactivate this process may have a unique clinical utility in treating pancreatic cancers and other malignancies with a similar dependence on autophagy. As chloroquine and its derivatives are potent inhibitors of autophagy and have been used safely in human patients for decades for a variety of purposes, these results are immediately translatable to the treatment of pancreatic cancer patients, and provide a much needed, novel vantage point of attack.TweetShare

    Let's immune system help

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    Imatinib potentiates antitumor T cell responses in gastrointestinal stromal tumor through the inhibition of Ido, 
    Vinod P Balachandran, et al. Nature Medicine17 (2011) 


    I would like to hilight this paper to our readership, as many of your are involved in the design of clinical trials and selection of potential biomarkers. This report is one of a handful of high impact papers that report the coperative role that inflammatory infiltrate and non cell autonomous effectors play in modulating response to established agents. This study demonstrates an interesting immunological mechanism of Imatininb  that contributes to the antitumor effect in a Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor (GIST) mouse model. Inflammatory infiltrate is a known finding in GIST specimens (including intratumoral CD8+ Tcells, Treg cells and macrophages). Acording to the authors, Imatinib activates CD8+ T cells and induces Treg cells apoptosis within the tumor. Imatinib is therefore able to reduce the expression of 2,3-dioxygenase (Ido) of tumor cells. Ido enzyme is involved in the catayzation of immunosuppressive metabolites from tryptophan and therefore mediates downstream immunological response. Interestingly Imatininb resistant tumors, generally as a result of a second KIT mutation, restore the overexpression of IDO and combination of Imatinib with CTLA-4 blockade (a well established immunotherapeutic strategy) act synergistically. This insight provides some hints on something we have been suspecting for a long time. It is easy to predict consequences for rational design of combination therapies and strategies to overcome resistance in Imatinib resistant tumors.TweetShare

    21 Haziran 2012 Perşembe

    Malaria drug slows pancreatic cancer growth in mouse models - 2011 Press Releases - Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

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    Malaria drug slows pancreatic cancer growth in mouse models - 2011 Press Releases - Dana-Farber Cancer Institute


    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute scientists report that they have shrunk or slowed the growth of notoriously resistant pancreatic tumors in mice, using a drug routinely prescribed for malaria and rheumatoid arthritis.The pre-clinical results, which will appear in the April issue of the journal Genes & Development and is currently published on its website, have already prompted the opening of a small clinical trial in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer, one of the deadliest and hardest-to-treat forms of cancer, said the investigators, led byAlec Kimmelman, MD, PhD, a radiation oncologist at Dana-Farber."We are seeing robust and impressive responses in pancreatic cancer mouse models," said Kimmelman, whose laboratory specializes in studies of pancreatic cancer, the fourth-leading cause of cancer death in the United States. The oral drug, hydroxychloroquine, is inexpensive, widely available, and causes relatively mild side effects, he said. A second, planned clinical trial will combine the drug with radiation."While these findings are indeed exciting and a cause for optimism, one needs to be mindful that so far the effects, while impressive, have only been shown in mice," said Ronald DePinho, MD, director of the Belfer Institute for Applied Cancer Science at Dana-Farber. "I eagerly await to see how the human studies will progress."A new treatment avenue would be extremely welcome in pancreatic cancer. The National Cancer Institute estimates that 43,140 people were diagnosed in 2010 and 36,800 died. Despite some recent gains with targeted molecular agents and combination regimens, only about six percent of patients live five years, and the median survival is less than six months.Hydroxychloroquine is a form of the drug chloroquine, which is used to prevent and treat malaria and also prescribed for autoimmune diseases, including lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. These compounds have recently stirred much interest in cancer research, because they inhibit a process called autophagy (from the Greek for "self-eating") that is elevated in cancer cells.Autophagy is present in normal cells as well, but at a much lower level. The process enables cells to break down and eliminate proteins, such as damaged cell membranes and worn-out organelles like mitochondria. But it is also a survival strategy. When nutrients are scarce, cells can digest and feed on their own non-critical proteins to avoid starvation.Cancer cells also use autophagy to outwit chemotherapy treatment. Research has shown that cancer cells can activate this process in response to a variety of cancer treatments, allowing them to survive during the stress of therapy. But, as Kimmelman noted, autophagy can also be a cell-death mechanism. Cancer researchers are intensely studying - and debating - how to manipulate autophagy as a potential method to slow tumors' growth or make them more sensitive to other therapies.In their research reported in Genes & Development, Kimmelman and colleagues were stunned to find that autophagy was turned on at all times in pancreatic cancer cell lines — not just under conditions of stress, treatment or starvation."This was a big surprise," he said. "These cells weren't deprived of nutrients; they were swimming in all the nutrients they could ever want."This suggested that for some unknown reason, pancreas tumors are highly dependent on autophagy, and therefore potentially uniquely good candidates for autophagy-inhibiting treatment.In their next experiments, the team administered chloroquine to several different pancreatic cancer cell cultures, and also tested its effects in three types of mouse models. In the laboratory cultures, they reported, the drug "markedly decreased" the growth of the tumor cells, showing that the cells were heavily dependent on autophagy to for continued growth.In vivo testing involved three types of mouse models: human pancreatic cancer cells placed under the rodents' skin (xenografts); human cells injected into the animals' pancreases (orthotopic transplants); and a genetic model (mice bioengineered to develop native pancreatic tumors).The response to chloroquine was "profound" in the xenograft models, Kimmelman said: all eight untreated mice died of their cancer within 140 days, while only one of eight treated mice had died by 180 days.The drug's effects were less dramatic but still impressive in the orthotopic and genetic mouse models, the researchers said. The tumors that developed in the genetically pancreatic cancer-prone mice were, like their equivalent in human patients, extremely resistant to all treatments. Among other properties, these tumors were embedded in tough, fibrous tissue that is difficult for drugs to penetrate.Nevertheless, the scientists reported that chloroquine treatment as a single agent increased the rodents' survival by 27 days compared with untreated control mice. This is encouraging, Kimmelman commented, because even the newest targeted drugs aimed at pancreatic cancer "don't have much effect in this genetic mouse model."The Dana-Farber trial of hydroxychloroquine, led by Kimmelman and oncologist Brian Wolpin, MD, is designed to enroll 36 pancreatic cancer patients in whom first- or second-line treatments have failed. The drug is taken in pill form twice a day. Results won't become available for at least a year, said Kimmelman.Kimmelman said the next step will be to investigate the combination of hydroxychloroquine with radiation in patients with operable pancreatic cancer."This is a very interesting and promising approach, attacking the Achilles' heel in pancreatic cancer's defenses," commented Robert Mayer, MD, of Dana-Farber's Center for Gastrointestinal Oncology. "But it's too early to say whether hydroxychloroquine should be added to chemotherapy, and what the risks and benefits might be, so we want to examine it in a clinical trial."Kimmelman's lab is also investigating other forms of cancer that might be good candidates for inhibition of autophagy by the drug. He said that their work, as well as recent findings from other labs, suggests that those cancers may be ones that are primarily driven by the KRAS oncogene — as nearly all pancreatic tumors are.Kimmelman, who also is an assistant professor of radiation oncology at Harvard Medical School, is the senior author of the publication. First author is Shenghong Yang, PhD, a member of the Kimmelman lab. Other authors are from Dana-Farber, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston University, and scientists from Italy and Germany.TweetShare

    Good News About a Very Bad Cancer - ScienceNOW

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    From sciencemag.com


    Pancreatic cancer is relentless and typically kills patients within a few months. Now scientists report that a treatment that fires up certain immune cells extends the lives of pancreatic cancer patients by more than 30%. Although the recipients survived for only about an extra 2 months, cancer researchers are enthusiastic about the results.The statistics on pancreatic cancer are dismal. Only about 5% of patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA), the most common form of the disease, are alive 5 years after diagnosis. And the odds of beating pancreatic cancer haven't improved much in the past 35 years, notes surgeon and cancer researcher Jason Fleming of MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. "We are really at square one with survival," he says.One of pancreatic cancer's dirty tricks involves co-opting white blood cells called leukocytes. Instead of attacking, these turncoats infiltrate the cancer and "essentially wall it off from the antitumor effects of the immune system," says tumor immunologist Robert Vonderheide of the University of Pennsylvania's Abramson Cancer Center. Vonderheide and colleagues wondered whether they could turn the immune system against the cancer by triggering CD40, a receptor protein carried by several kinds of defensive cells. Activating CD40 is usually necessary for immune cells to take on tumors.The researchers dosed 21 PDA patients with the standard chemotherapy drug gemcitabine and an antibody that flips on CD40. Computed tomography scans showed that pancreatic tumors dwindled or stabilized in 15 of the subjects. In some of the recipients, the treatment also shrank metastatic tumors, or colonies from the original cancer that had sprouted in other parts of the body. Historically, PDA patients who receive gemcitabine survive about 5.7 months. But as the researchers report online today in Science, patients in the experimental group lived for 7.4 months.To determine how the treatment curbed tumor growth, the researchers tested genetically engineered mice that develop PDA. The combination of gemcitabine and a rodent version of the CD40-activating antibody—and even the mouse antibody alone—reduced tumors in about 30% of the animals. The researchers expected that activating CD40 would provoke a counterattack by the immune cells known as T cells. But to their surprise, they found that the antibody worked even in mice that lack these cells. Instead, the attackers were macrophages, a more general kind of defensive cell whose jobs include munching bacterial invaders and helping to heal injured tissue. Macrophages were able to squirm through the white blood cell blockade and start killing the tumor cells."These are promising results that need to be expanded and tested further in larger studies," says Vonderheide. One question to investigate, he says, is whether other combinations of treatments boost the activator's killing power, such as pairing it with a vaccine that incites T cells to attack the tumor.Cancer experts are impressed. "It's a great article," says Fleming. "It's definitely a huge step forward," adds cancer biologist Dafna Bar-Sagi of the New York University School of Medicine in New York City. Stretching survival by less than 2 months might not seem like a big deal, but given the poor prognosis for most patients, "these are significant numbers," says molecular biologist Jonathan Brody of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. All three researchers, who were not involved in the study, agree that the results highlight the importance of designing treatments that focus not just on tumor cells but also on the neighboring tissue that helps them survive and grow. "We need to be targeting those cells," Brody says.TweetShare

    Expanding cancer boundaries, Immune response is not enough.

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    Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma is characterized by an immune reaction that is immunosuppressive since the earliest stages of tumor development (Clarck et al., 2007). In a recent article in Science the group leaded by Vonderheide at UPENN investigated the effect of re-activation of the immune response against cancer by the use of CD40 in addition to Gemcitabine in a small group of unresectable pancreatic cancer patients. Encouraging results showed partial response in a number of patients enrolled in this study. At first sight this confirm the idea that immune therapies should be increasingly tested in controlled studies and eventually become one of the foundation of combination therapies. However when the looked for effective T cell response against tumor in patients and in a Kras and p53 mutated mouse model of pancreatic cancer they didn't observe what they were expecting. What they found instead is a macrophage activation that rapid infiltrated tumor and facilitated depletion of stroma suggesting the immune surveillance was not induced by T cells. This paper follows the revolutionary findings of Tuveson's group (Olive et al, 2009) on the relevance of stroma directed treatments in facilitating drug delivery and anti-tumor efficacy of chemotherapy.It is exciting to see things coming together in a more comprehensive view of events than we could only imagine a few years ago: novel compounds selectively acting on cancer molecular targets, immune response and microenvironment unveil unanticipated anticancer mechanisms and synergies.






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