Researchers on Mayo Clinic's Florida campus have shut down one of the most common and lethal forms of lung cancer by combining the rheumatoid arthritis drug auranofin with an experimental targeted agent.
The combination therapy worked in a laboratory study to stop lung adenocarcinoma associated with mutation of the KRAS gene.
The study will be published in Cancer Cell.
"If our approach works in KRAS-mediated lung adenocarcinoma, it may work in other KRAS-mediated cancers, such as pancreatic and colon cancers, as well as other cancer types," says the study's senior author, Alan P. Fields, Ph.D., a cancer biologist and the Monica Flynn Jacoby Professor of Cancer Research in the Department of Cancer Biology at Mayo Clinic in Florida.
Based on this and other preclinical research from Dr. Fields' team, Mayo Clinic is conducting early-phase clinical trials to test the effectiveness of auranofin alone and in targeted combinations in patients with KRAS-mediated lung adenocarcinoma, ovarian cancer, and another common lung cancer called lung squamous cell carcinoma.
The current study:
"Cancer stem cells are the really bad actors in many cancers," Dr. Fields says. "Cancer stem cells initiate cancer development, drive its growth and metastasis, and also develop resistance to treatments.
"Conventional chemotherapy can effectively kill non-stem cancer cells, but cancer stem cells often survive," Dr. Fields says. "Then, once therapy is stopped, these cancer stem cells can re-establish the tumour and cause a relapse."
The current research study built upon previous research from Dr. Fields' laboratory that:
Dr. Fields says the current study surprisingly found that PKCiota regulates cancer stem cells through a different pathway in KRAS-mediated lung adenocarcinoma than in lung squamous cell carcinoma.
It also activates a different oncogene, known as NOTCH3.
This enabled an individualised approach.
"Using this knowledge, we treated KRAS-mediated lung adenocarcinoma tumours in mice with auranofin and a NOTCH3 inhibitor," says the study's first author, Syed A. Ali, Ph.D., a postdoctoral researcher in Fields' lab. "We found that these two drugs work better together than either drug did alone."
"This research indicates auranofin might be useful in treating many different cancer types," Dr. Fields says. "By combining it with a second agent targeted to the specific signalling pathway, we hope to fin-tune therapy to the particular vulnerabilities of each type of tumour," Dr. Fields says.
"This approach may be useful in multiple forms of lung, ovarian, pancreatic, and possibly head and neck, cervical, and several other cancers," Dr. Fields says. Study co-authors -- all of Mayo Clinic -- are:
Source: Mayo Clinic