This should be of interest to my fellow sufferers:
A new prostate cancer "homing device" could
improve detection and allow for the first targeted treatment of the disease.
A team of Purdue University researchers has synthesized a molecule that finds
and penetrates prostate cancer cells and has created imaging agents and
therapeutic drugs that can link to the molecule and be carried with it as
cargo.
A radioimaging application used for body scans is expected to enter clinical
trials this fall, and an optical imaging application used to measure prostate
cancer cells in blood samples is already in clinical trials.
Philip Low, the Ralph C. Corley Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry who led
the team, said a targeted treatment could be much more effective in treating
cancer and would greatly reduce the harmful side effects associated with
current treatments.
"Currently none of the drugs available to treat prostate cancer are
targeted, which means they go everywhere in the body as opposed to only the
tumor, and so are quite toxic for the patient," said Low, who is a member
of the Purdue Cancer Center. "By being able to target only the cancer
cells, we could eliminate toxic side effects of treatments. In addition, the
ability to target only the cancer cells can greatly improve imaging of the
cancer to diagnose the disease, determine if it has spread or is responding to
treatment."
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer, other than skin cancers, and is the
second leading cause of cancer death in American men, according to the American
Cancer Society. It is estimated that about 192,280 new cases will be diagnosed
and 27,360 men will die of prostate cancer in the United States this year.
The molecule Low's team created attaches to prostate-specific membrane antigen,
or PSMA, a protein that is found on the membrane of more than 90 percent of all
prostate cancers. It also is found on the blood vessels of most solid tumors
and could provide a way to cut off the tumor blood supply, Low said.
"A lot of new drugs are being designed to destroy the vasculature of solid
tumors, and, if they could be linked to this new targeting molecule, we could
have a two-pronged attack for prostate cancer," he said. "We could
not only kill the prostate cancer cells directly, we could also destroy the
vasculature that feeds the tumors."
There also is potential for the targeting molecule to be used to attack the
vasculature of solid tumors of other types of cancers, Low said.
Two papers detailing the work of the Purdue team were published in the June 1
issue of Molecular Pharmaceutics. Endocyte Inc. funded the work.
The team's animal study data shows an ability to eliminate human prostate cancer
cells in mice with no evidence of collateral toxicity in normal tissue.
Sumith Kularatne, a graduate student in Purdue's chemistry department and first
author of both papers, compared the targeting molecule to a homing device.
"The molecule acts like a homing device for prostate cancer," he
said. "PSMA, which is found only on prostate cancer cells and tumor blood
vessels, acts as the homing signal that the molecule targets. The molecule and
its cargo go only to cancerous tissue, leaving healthy tissue unharmed."
Once the molecule reaches the PSMA protein, it binds to it. The molecule is
designed with a specific shape that fits with the protein like a key to a lock,
Kularatne said. The molecule and its cargo are then carried inside the cell
with the protein as it goes through its normal cycle.
In 1995 Low developed a similar method to infiltrate cancer cells by attaching
treatments to the vitamin folate, which many cancers rapidly consume. This
method provided a "Trojan Horse" entry of large treatment molecules
that otherwise would not be able to enter cancer cells.
Low was inspired to find a similar way to target prostate cancer, which does
not have the same appetite for folate, he said.
A clinical trial of the radioimaging application is expected to begin at the
Indiana University Medical Center in the fall through a collaboration between
the Purdue Cancer Center and the Indiana University Cancer Center with
additional support from Endocyte Inc.
A radioimaging agent linked to the targeting molecule will be injected into
prostate cancer patients and pictures will be taken using a special camera that
detects radioactivity. The pictures show where the cancer is present to help
doctors determine if it has metastasized, or spread, to any other areas of the
body. It also will help doctors decide on the best course of treatment, Low
said.
There is currently only one radioimaging agent for prostate cancer approved by
the Food and Drug Administration.
"The current imaging capabilities available for prostate cancer are very
poor," Low said. "The existing imaging agent is limited because of
its large size, which is difficult to get into a solid tumor. Also it seeks out
a target located inside the cancer cell and is only able to mark injured cells
that are falling apart as opposed to actively growing cancer cells."
The targeting molecule and radioimaging agent combination designed by Low's
group is more than 150 times smaller than the existing agent and has much
easier penetration through a solid tumor to reach all of the cells inside, he
said. It also has the advantage of targeting an area of PSMA exposed on the
outside of cancer cells.
Already in clinical trials is an optical imaging application that involves
attaching a fluorescent dye to the targeting molecule and mixing it with a
patient's blood sample. Circulating prostate cancer cells in the sample
fluoresce and are easily measured to help in diagnosing patients with prostate
cancer. Researchers also are investigating whether this could be used to
evaluate a patient's response to therapy, Low said.
Low's research group modeled the targeting molecule after a naturally occurring
molecule that strongly binds to PSMA, called DUPA. Several alterations were
necessary to create a molecule that fit the needs of a homing device and
delivery vehicle, Kularatne said. The team created an area on the molecule that
would link to various imaging or therapeutic agents to bring them along as
cargo and created a spacer that would stretch the molecule so that its cargo
would not keep it from properly fitting into the binding site. The spacer also
was designed to improve binding of the targeting molecule to PSMA.
In addition to Low and Kularatne, co-authors of the papers include Endocyte
researchers Kevin Wang and Hari-Krishna R. Santhapuram, graduate student in
medicinal chemistry Zhigang Zhou, graduate student in chemistry Jun Yang, and
professor of medicinal chemistry and molecular pharmacology Carol B. Post.
Ron
B