​New drug found to ‘annihilate’ solid cancerous tumours

​A new “cancer-stopping” drug has been found to “annihilate” solid cancerous tumours in early stage studies.
Untreated cancer cells can be seen on the left - and cells treated with the new drug are on the right.Untreated cancer cells can be seen on the left - and cells treated with the new drug are on the right.
Untreated cancer cells can be seen on the left - and cells treated with the new drug are on the right.

The chemotherapy drug leaves healthy cells unaffected, scientists said.

The AOH1996 drug was named after a child – Anna Olivia Healy, born in 1996 – who died when she was only nine after being diagnosed with a rare childhood cancer neuroblastoma.

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Professor Linda Malkas and her team spent two decades developing the drug that targets a protein in all cancers — including the cancer that led to Anna’s death.

The protein, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), was once thought too challenging to aim targeted therapies at.

PCNA in its mutated form encourages tumours to grow by aiding DNA replication and repair of cancerous cells.

Prof Malkas and her team at the City of Hope in California, one of the United States’ largest cancer research and treatment organisations, said their targeted chemotherapy appears to “annihilate” all solid tumours in preclinical research.

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AOH1996 was tested in more than 70 cell lines and was found to selectively kills cancer cells by disrupting the normal cell reproductive cycle, but it did not interrupt the reproductive cycle of healthy stem cells.

Pre-clinical studies suggest the drug has been shown to be effective in treating cells derived from breast, prostate, brain, ovarian, cervical, skin and lung cancers.

The drug still needs to go through rigorous safety and efficacy testing and large-scale clinical trials before it can be used widely.

But the first patient received the potentially cancer-stopping pill in October with the phase one clinical trial still ongoing and expected to last for at least two years.

Patients are still being recruited to the trial.

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Researchers are also still examining mechanisms that make the drug work in animal studies.

Prof Malkas said: “PCNA is like a major airline terminal hub containing multiple plane gates.

“Data suggests PCNA is uniquely altered in cancer cells, and this fact allowed us to design a drug that targeted only the form of PCNA in cancer cells.

“Our cancer-killing pill is like a snowstorm that closes a key airline hub, shutting down all flights in and out only in planes carrying cancer cells.”

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The professor called the results “promising” but made clear that research has only found AOH1996 can suppress tumour growth in cell and animal models.

Lead author of the study, Long Gu, said: “No-one has ever targeted PCNA as a therapeutic because it was viewed as ‘undruggable’, but clearly City of Hope was able to develop an investigational medicine for a challenging protein target.”

Commenting on the study, Dr Rupal Mistry, senior research information manager at Cancer Research UK, said: “If successful, this drug would be revolutionary for people with cancer. However, research is still in the early stages and more work still needs to be done to understand the response in humans.”

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