Sarcoma growth slowed in trial testing new therapeutic combination

Sarcoma growth slowed in trial testing new therapeutic combination

10 Jul 2014

A small clinical trial has tested new treatment combination against resistant sarcomas. The results show that the growth of these tumors can be stabilized.

About Sarcomas

Sarcomas are a rare type of tumor and complex since there are several subtypes. It can affect from children to older ages. It is usually diagnosed in advanced and very little localized phases. So the 50% cured with major surgeries and localized treatment, but the other 50% is resistant to conventional therapies and ends metastasizing.

A research group in sarcomas at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute and the Catalan Institute of Oncology, led by Oscar Martinez-Tirado, investigate to test new drugs or new combinations of drugs that could be more effective against these tumors and for that works closely with the coordinator of the Unit of Sarcomas at ICO, Javier García del Muro. This teamwork joins the most basic research to the most clinical and has led in this case to bring the results of research from bench to bedside.

Conventional chemotherapy and targeted therapy

Researchers tested different combinations of conventional chemotherapy with new drugs aimed at molecular targets in cell sarcomas and decided to try in mice a combination of conventional chemotherapy used to treat these tumors and rapamycin, a drug that acts specifically in mTOR, an altered protein in various types of cancer.

"With the results in the cell lines we thought it was the best option to test in mice," said Martinez-Tirado "but the truth is that the results in animals were spectacular. In mice that had the tumor and we gave to them this combination, the tumor stopped growing and weeks after stopping treatment it was not recovered, as it does if we treat them with chemotherapy alone or only with rapamycin. "

Encouraging phase 1 trial results lead to phase 2

Responsible for this phase 1 clinical trial has been Javier García del Muro. It has been tested this new combination in nineteen patients, most of sarcoma but also included patients with other tumor types that have no treatment. "Although Phase 1 trials are used to determine the recommended dose and discard toxicities, we have seen that the combination is active in various tumor types, as we have seen prolongated stabilizations in advanced and resistant tumors to chemotherapy" .

With these encouraging results, the group has launched a phase 2 clinical trial. "We have completed the recruitment of patients, in this case, only sarcomas, to test whether this combination really works in these patients and whether it is better than current treatments."

 

Source: Science Daily

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