Tumour-targeting drug paves way for bone cancer treatment

Washington D.C. [USA], Jul 13 : The treatment of osteosarcoma, the most common tumour of bone, is challenging, but a new study is offering hope to the patients with this disease.

The study led by The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Centre found that a drug, known as bone metastasis-targeting peptidomimetic (BMTP-11), has potential as a new therapeutic strategy for this devastating illness.

Results from the preclinical study looked at BMTP-11 alone and in combination with the chemotherapy agent gemcitabine.

Although osteosarcoma is a relatively rare cancer, it is a leading disease-related cause of death in children and young adults ages 10 to 20.

However, over the last 25 years, the five-year survival rate has remained unchanged, and the treatment options for these patients are few.

In addition, the side effects of available treatment options often are significant and cumulative, and may cause other health problems and damage to major organs.

"What's novel about this treatment is that BMTP -11 targets the tumor and spares other organs," said researcher Valerae O.

Lewis. "We believe this study lays the groundwork for a clinical trial for the treatment of osteosarcoma without the cumulative and mortal side effects seen with the current treatment options." The study results identified IL-11R alpha as an osteosarcoma cell surface receptor that correlated with tumor progression and poor prognosis in osteosarcoma patients.

The team, which included co-authors Renata Pasqualini and Wadih Arap, also illustrated that IL-11R alpha and IL-11 are up-regulated in human metastatic osteosarcoma cell lines, and this correlated with the development of lung metastases in mouse models of the disease.

The metastatic potential of the osteosarcoma cell lines could be modulated by targeting IL-11R alpha expression.

Death from respiratory failure linked to metastasis to the lungs remains a significant problem among osteosarcoma patients.

"We were able to document anti-tumour activity against osteosarcoma models," said Pasqualini. "Given that a first-in-human trial of BMTP-11 has recently been reported, one would hope that this proof-of-concept study might lead to early translational clinical trials in human osteosarcoma as a logical next step in the context of an unmet medical oncology need." Arap added that "this work provides a preclinical foundation for the potential design and development of a second line combination therapy regimen composed of conventional chemotherapeutics plus the targeted candidate drug BMTP-11 for application in unfortunate patients with recalcitrant osteosarcoma." The study appears online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Source: ANI