Researchers from the Molecular Cancer group at the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute (IMIM) and doctors from Hospital del Mar, have demonstrated the effectiveness of a drug for treating metastatic bladder cancer in patients who did not respond to the usual treatment.
The preliminary results of an ongoing clinical trial show that TAK-228, a mTORC1/2 protein inhibitor, can stop the progression of the disease.
Four of the seven patients in the trial showed positive results.
The trial also involved Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau in Barcelona, Hospital Universitari Parc Taulí in Sabadell, Clínica Universitaria in Navarre, and Hospital General Universitario in Elche.
The principle behind this drug is the inhibition of the mTORC1/2 protein, commonly present in tumours.
This protein plays a key role in the development and spread of tumours.
The researchers analysed its effectiveness in the laboratory, in bladder cancer cell lines both in vitro and implanted into mice.
They also worked with fresh tissue from the tumours of patients.
The novelty is that, at the same time, they designed a clinical trial that is now underway.
The results, published in Molecular Cancer Research, demonstrate not only the good preclinical results of this drug, but that these are even better when combined with other treatments.
At the same time, the researchers determined that it was more effective on a subgroup of tumours with particular characteristics, certain genetic alterations that could be used as therapeutic targets.
"The fact of discovering a new mechanism of action for this mTORC1/2 inhibitor, beyond inhibiting this pathway, in other words, which acts against a molecular target -a specific genetic alteration, allows us to hope for much more than we originally expected", explains Dr. Joaquim Bellmunt, director of the IMIM and principal author of the study.
The clinical trial, which evaluated seven patients, reports that four of these showed a positive response to the drug.
In these sufferers, tumour growth was slowed and tumour progression avoided.
These were metastatic bladder cancer patients who did not respond to the usual treatments, including immunotherapy.
"For the moment," says Dr. Bellmunt, "we have obtained a metastatic bladder cancer response in patients in whom the existing therapies have not worked."
Currently in the United States, only one treatment for a bladder cancer molecular target has been approved.
It is a unique treatment, differing from chemotherapy or radiation therapy.
Dr. Bellmunt highlights this fact, pointing out that "the drug we have studied could become a second potential therapeutic target in bladder cancer patients. It is not chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or immunotherapy, but it attacks specific genetic alterations found in tumours".
It is the tenth most common cancer in the world, with 550,000 new cases in 2018 (according to World Cancer Research Fund).
65% of cases occur in developed countries, it is more frequent in men than women, and it is strongly linked to smoking (from 70-75% of cases).
It is typically detected between the ages of 65 and 70, although it can also be diagnosed at other ages.
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