COLUMBIA SCIENTISTS DEVELOP CANCER “TERMINATOR” VIRUSES,
ELIMINATING BREAST AND PANCREATIC CANCERS IN MICE
Results Advance Quest for Viral-Based Therapies for Cancer
NEW YORK, NY (Sept. 19, 2005) –
Researchers at Columbia University Medical Center continue to make
strides in their work to develop the next generation of effective
viral-based therapies for cancer. Two papers about promising
research with genetically engineered viruses studied in mice, published
today in the journals
Cancer Research and the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS),
bring us significantly closer to this objective and the start of
clinical trials with these viral-based therapies in cancer patients.
Both papers were led by Paul B. Fisher, M.Ph., Ph.D., professor of
clinical pathology and the Michael and Stella Chernow Urological Cancer
Research Scientist at Columbia University College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
In the
Cancer Research paper,
the researchers discuss the development of a “terminator” virus, which
was administered to mice with pancreatic cancers at both primary and
distant sites (akin to metastases). As predicted, when the virus
was injected directly into the primary tumor, the virus destroyed not
only the primary tumor, but also distant tumors. While the
infection caused by the virus was sufficient to kill the primary tumor,
a second weapon added to the virus – interferon-gamma (IFN-) –
eliminated the metastases. IFN- elicited an anti-tumor immune
response against the distant metastatic cancer cells.
In the
PNAS paper, Dr. Fisher
and the team describe the production of a virus conceptually similar to
the “terminator” virus, which selectively replicates and kills breast
cancer cells in mice. Human breast tumor xenografts were
established on both sides of immune-deficient mice. Results found
that treating the tumors on just one side of the animal with very few
injections of this modified virus not only cured the injected tumors,
but also resulted in the destruction of the tumors on the opposite side
of the animal. Instead of carrying IFN- as the other virus did,
this virus carried a gene called mda-7/IL-24, a novel gene identified
and cloned in Dr. Fisher’s laboratory, which is selectively toxic to
cancer cells and is now in phase II clinical trials as a cancer gene
therapeutic.
“We are extremely excited about these results and the prospect of one
day using a form of the cancer terminator virus in human clinical
trials,” said Dr. Fisher, the study’s senior author. “While the
results of these trials need to be investigated further and replicated
in future trials, we believe that viral-based therapies will someday
soon be a standard part of the cancer armamentarium.”
About the “Terminator” Viruses
The “terminator” viruses have the potential to become effective
treatments for a wide range of tumors - such as ovarian, pancreatic,
breast, brain (glioma), prostate, skin (melanoma) and colon cancer -
because the virus is constructed to exploit a characteristic of all
solid cancers. However, clinical trials are necessary before such
treatments can be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and
available for patients.
These publications are a continuation of research published in the Jan.
25, 2005 issue of PNAS, where the same research team, also led by Dr.
Fisher, incorporated gene therapy into a specially designed
non-replicating virus to overcome one of the major hurdles of gene
therapy: its tendency to kill normal cells in the process of
eradicating cancer cells. The virus eradicated prostate cancer
cells in the lab and in animals, while leaving normal cells
unscathed.
The present cancer “terminator” viruses represent the next generation
of therapeutic viruses that permit replication uniquely in cancer cells
with simultaneous production of immune modulating and toxic genes.
These viruses effectively eliminate primary tumors and distant tumors
(metastases) without harming normal cells or tissues.
Dr. Fisher’s cancer research team includes Columbia University Medical
Center investigators: Drs. Zao-zhong Su (research scientist), Devanand
Sarkar (associate research scientist), Nicolaq Vozhilla (pathology
technician), Eun Sook Park (pathology technician) and Pankaj Gupta
(associate research scientist). Two scientists from Virginia
Commonwealth University in Richmond, Va. are also involved in the
research: Mr. Aaron Randolph (graduate student) and Dr. Kristoffer
Valerie (professor).
###
Columbia University Medical Center
provides international leadership in basic, pre-clinical and clinical
research, medical education, and health care. The medical center trains
future leaders in health care and includes the dedicated work of many
physicians, scientists, nurses, dentists, and public health
professionals at the College of Physicians & Surgeons, the School
of Dental & Oral Surgery, the School of Nursing, the Mailman School
of Public Health, the biomedical departments of the Graduate School of
Arts and Sciences, and allied research centers and institutions.
With a strong history of discovery in health care, Columbia University
Medical Center researchers are leading the development of novel
therapies and advances to address a wide range of health conditions.
www.cumc.columbia.edu