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TEST DISCOVERED TO PREDICT PROGNOSIS WITH TREATMENT OF P53 TUMOR SUPPRESSOR GENE THERAPY
13 June 2007 - American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
| A routine laboratory test that predicted poor outcome from traditional radiation and chemotherapy treatment for head and neck cancers has now been found to predict a good prognosis with treatment of p53 tumor suppressor gene therapy, making it potentially the first predictive biomarker test for a gene-based drug. |
Introgen Therapeutics researchers found that patients with advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck cancer whose pre-treatment tumor samples over-expressed p53 protein were significantly more likely to respond to Advexin therapy than those whose tumor showed little p53 protein. Advexin is a gene based drug, injected directly into tumors, which uses an adenoviral vector to deliver the wild type p53 gene to tumor cells. Results were presented at the first meeting on Molecular Diagnostics in Cancer Therapeutic Development, organized by the American Association for Cancer Research. “Not only do we now have a way to predict if the gene therapy is likely to succeed, those patients for which it does work are the hardest patients to treat,” said Laura L. Licato, Ph.D., associate director for Clinical Research at Introgen. “Accumulation of p53 has corresponded with a poor response to traditional therapies, as well as lower survival and a shorter time to disease progression.” “Selecting those who have the best chance of responding to p53 tumor suppressor gene therapy also helps perfect clinical trial testing,” Licato said. The researchers specifically found, in a subset of patients from phase II clinical trials, that 73 percent of patients with p53-positive tumors responded to the therapy, compared to a 14 percent response in patients with tumors that were p53-negative. Median survival also increased to 11 months for p53-positive patients, compared to 3 months for those with p53-negative tumors. Head and neck cancer is the fifth most common cancer worldwide. Each year approximately 40,000 Americans are diagnosed with head and neck cancer, and about 11,000 patients will die. Many cancers have a dysfunction in the p53 pathway that regulates the cell cycle, helping to protect against cancer formation, but researchers estimate that more than 50 percent of head and neck tumors over-express p53 protein. That suggests a defect in protein regulation or that the p53 gene is mutated, incapable of producing effective protein. Tumors that are p53 negative likely have a working p53 gene and protein pathway, as normal p53 levels in cells are typically low. Advexin is farthest along in federal Food and Drug Administration review of any experimental gene therapy, according to Introgen, and has been granted fast track designation for an application of use in head and neck cancer. Results from two phase II clinical trials involving more than 160 SCCHN patients have found that 18 percent of patients treated with Advexin achieved local regional disease control. Two other phase III trials in the disease are underway. According to Introgen’s published research, Advexin has also achieved 100 percent response when combined with chemotherapy to treat locally advanced breast cancer, and a 69 percent response when used with radiation to treat non-small cell lung cancer.
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About: American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
The American Association for Cancer Research is a professional society of more than 24,000 laboratory and clinical scientists engaged in basic, translational, and clinical cancer research in the United States and more than 60 other countries. Founded in 1907, the AACR has as its mission to accelerate the prevention and cure of cancer through research, education, communication, collaboration and advocacy. Among the means to that end, the association publishes five major peer-reviewed scientific journals: Cancer Research – the most frequently cited cancer journal in the world – as well as Clinical Cancer Research; Molecular Cancer Therapeutics; Molecular Cancer Research; and Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. The AACR convenes an Annual Meeting attended by more than 15,000 scientists from around the world who share new and significant discoveries in the cancer field. Specialty meetings throughout the year focus on all the important areas of basic, translational and clinical cancer research.
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