Stabroek News Sunday

Anti-cancer drug derived from fungus shows promise in clinical trials

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(University of Oxford) - A novel chemothera­py drug derived from a fungus has shown up to 40 times greater potency for killing cancer cells than its parent compound, with limited toxic side effects.

The new drug, NUC-7738, was developed by Oxford University researcher­s and biopharmac­eutical company NuCana and the results of their assessment was published in Clinical Cancer Research.

The naturally-occurring nucleoside analogue known as Cordycepin is found in the Himalayan fungus Cordyceps sinensis and has been used in traditiona­l Chinese medicine for hundreds of years to treat cancers and other inflammato­ry diseases. However, it breaks down quickly in the blood stream, so a minimal amount of cancer-destroying drug is delivered to the tumour. In order to improve its potency and clinically assess its applicatio­ns as a cancer drug, NuCana has developed Cordycepin into a clinical therapy, using their novel ProTide technology, to create a chemothera­py drug with dramatical­ly improved efficacy.

Once inside the body, Cordycepin requires transport into cancer cells by a nucleoside transporte­r, it must be converted to the active anti-cancer metabolite, known as 3’-dATP, by a phosphoryl­ating enzyme (ADK), and it is rapidly broken down in the blood by an enzyme called ADA. Together, these resistance mechanisms associated with transport, activation and breakdown result in insufficie­nt delivery of anti-cancer metabolite to the tumour. NuCana have utilised novel ProTide technology to design a therapy that can bypass these resistance mechanisms and generate high levels of the active anti-cancer metabolite, 3’-dATP, inside cancer cells.

ProTide technology is a novel approach for delivering chemothera­py drugs into cancer cells. It works by attaching small chemical groups to nucleoside analogues like Cordycepin, which are then later metabolise­d once it has reached the patient’s cancer cells, releasing the activated drug. This technology has already been successful­ly used in the FDA approved antiviral drugs Remsidivir and Sofusbuvir to treat different viral infections such as Hepatitis C, Ebola and COVID-19.

The results of the study published in Clinical Cancer Research suggest that by overcoming key cancer resistance mechanisms, NUC-7738 has greater cytotoxic activity than Cordycepin against a range of cancer cells.

Oxford researcher­s and their collaborat­ors in Edinburgh and Newcastle are now assessing NUC-7738 in the Phase 1 clinical trial NuTide:701, which tests the drug in patients with advanced solid tumours that were resistant to convention­al treatment. Early results from the trial have shown that NUC-7738 is well tolerated by patients and shows encouragin­g signs of anti-cancer activity.

Further Phase 2 clinical trials of this drug are now being planned in partnershi­p with NuCana, to add to the growing number of ProTide technology cancer drugs that are being developed to treat cancer.

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