Islamabad, Jan 13 : Cancer researchers at the Peggy and
Charles Stephenson Oklahoma Cancer Center have found a way to stop early stage
pancreatic cancer in research models -- a result that has far-reaching
implications in chemoprevention for high-risk patients.
The research
already has sparked a clinical trial in California, and the FDA-approved drug,
Gefitinib, should be in clinical trials at OU's cancer center and others
nationwide in about a year. The research appears in the latest issue of Cancer
Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer
Research.
C.V. Rao, Ph.D., and his team of researchers were able to show
for the first time that a drug used in current chemotherapy for later stages of
pancreatic cancer had a dramatic effect if used earlier.
With low doses
of Gefitinib, which has no known side effects at this level, scientists were
able to not only stop pancreatic cancer tumors from growing, but after 41 weeks
of treatment, the cancer was gone.
"This is one of the most important
studies in pancreatic cancer prevention," Rao said. "Pancreatic cancer is a
poorly understood cancer and the focus has been on treatment in the end stages.
But, we found if you start early, there will be a much greater benefit. Our goal
is to block the spread of the cancer. That is our best chance at beating this
disease."
The Oklahoma cancer center research team said the finding
points to an effective way to stop pancreatic cancer before it reaches later
stages of development where the survival rate drops below 6
percent.
Currently, most pancreatic cancer is not identified until the
later stages. However, research is moving closer to the development of an early
detection test for pancreatic cancer. When that is in place, Oklahoma cancer
center researchers believe they now have a method to target the cancer before it
spreads.
Rao said OU officials and researchers will meet with other
centers, including M.D. Anderson, whose specialists called the research
"provocative," to discuss a pilot study in early 2011. Researchers hope to begin
a Phase II clinical trial at the centers within 18 months. A Phase I trial is
not required since the drug already has approval for human use from the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration.
The clinical trials will focus on at-risk
patients, particularly those with an inflammation of the pancreas called
pancreatitis. The drug also could help other high risk populations, including
patients with a family history of pancreatic cancer and American Indian
populations or others with Type 2 diabetes.
Gefitinib works by targeting
signals of a gene that is among the first to mutate when pancreatic cancer is
present. By targeting the signal for tumor growth expressed by the mutated gene,
researchers were able to stop the cancer's procession.
"This gene is the
key in 95 percent of cases of pancreatic cancer. It is our best target," Rao
said. "By targeting this gene, we can activate or inactivate several other genes
and processes down the line."
Rao said the drug also could be effective
in lung and colorectal cancer, but it is not known if it would work as well as
in pancreatic cancer. The OU College of Pharmacy is assisting in the development
of drugs and imaging techniques needed to further test Gefitinib with
patients.
Rao's research was funded by a grant from the National Cancer
Institute.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Scientists discover way to stop pancreatic cancer in early stages
Scientists discover way to stop pancreatic cancer in early stages
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