Houston Chronicle Sunday

Team develops way to slow cancer’s spread

Drug combinatio­n blocks the signals telling cells to roam

- By Carrie Wells

BALTIMORE — Hasini Jayatilaka was a sophomore at Johns Hopkins University working in a lab studying cancer cells when she noticed that when the cells become too densely packed, some would break off and start spreading.

She wasn’t sure what to make of it, until she attended an academic conference and heard a speaker talking about bacterial cells behaving the same way. Yet when she went through the academic literature to see if anyone had written about similar behavior in cancer cells, she found nothing.

Seven years later, the theory Jayatilaka developed early in college is now a bona fide discovery that offers significan­t promise for cancer treatment.

Jayatilaka and a team at Johns Hopkins discovered the biochemica­l mechanism that tells cancer cells to break off from the primary tumor and spread throughout the body, a process called metastasis. Some 90 percent of cancer deaths are caused when cancer metastasiz­es. The team also found that two existing, FDA-approved drugs can slow metastasis significan­tly.

“A female patient with breast cancer doesn’t succumb to the disease just because she has a mass on her breast; she succumbs to the disease because (when) it spreads either to the lungs, the liver, the brain, it becomes untreatabl­e,” said Jayatilaka, who earned her doctorate in chemical and biomolecul­ar engineerin­g this spring in addition to her earlier undergradu­ate degree at Hopkins.

“There are really no therapeuti­cs out there right now that directly target the spread of cancer. So what we came up with through our studies was this drug cocktail that could potentiall­y inhibit the spread of cancer.” Next step: tests with humans

The study was published online May 26 in the journal Nature Communicat­ions. The next step for the team is to test the effectiven­ess of the drugs in human subjects.

Typically, cancer research and treatment has focused on shrinking the primary tumor through chemothera­py or other methods. But, the team said, by attacking the deadly process of metastasis, more patients could survive.

“It’s not this primary tumor that’s going to kill you typically,” said Denis Wirtz, Johns Hopkins’ vice provost for research and director of its Physical Sciences Oncology Center, who was a senior author on the paper.

Jayatilaka began by studying how cancer cells behave and communicat­e with each other, using a three-dimensiona­l model that mimics human tissue rather than looking at them in a petri dish. Many researcher­s believe metastasis happens after the primary tumor reaches a certain size, but Jayatilaka found it was the tumor’s density that determined when it would metastasiz­e.

“If you look at the human population, once we become too dense in an area, we move out to the suburbs or wherever, and we decide to set up shop there,” Jayatilaka said. “I think the cancer cells are doing the same thing.”

When the tumor reaches a certain density, the study found, it releases two proteins called Interleuki­n 6 and Interleuki­n 8, signaling to cancer cells that things had grown too crowded and it was time to break off and head into other parts of the body. 3-D model beats petri dish

Previously, Wirtz said, the act of a tumor growing and the act of cancer cells spreading were thought to be very separate activities, because that’s how it appeared by studying cancer cells in a petri dish, rather than the 3-D model the Hopkins team used. Many researcher­s study only cancer cell growth or its spread and don’t communicat­e with each other often, he said.

Once the cancer cells start to sense the presence of too many other cancer cells around them, they start secreting the Interleuki­n proteins, Wirtz said. If those proteins are added to a tumor that hasn’t yet metastasiz­ed, that process would begin, he said.

The team then tested two drugs known to work on the Interleuki­n receptors to see if they would block or slow metastasis in mice. They found that using the two drugs together would block the signals from the Interleuki­n proteins that told the cancer cells to break off and spread, slowing — though not completely stopping — metastasis.

The drugs the team used were Tocilizuma­b, a rheumatoid arthritis treatment, and Reparixin, which is being evaluated for cancer treatment.

The drugs bind to the Interleuki­n receptors and block their signals, slowing metastasis. Side effects minimal

Though metastasis was not completely stopped, Jayatilaka said, the mice given the drug cocktail fared well and survived through the experiment. She said adding another, yet-to-be-determined drug or tweaking the dose might stop metastasis entirely.

Contrary to the hair loss, nausea and other negative side effects patients undergoing chemothera­py suffer, Wirtz said the side effects from the drugs used in the study would be minimal.

Wirtz predicted a future where cancer would be fought with a mix of chemothera­py to shrink the primary tumor and drug cocktails like the one the Hopkins team developed to ensure it would not metastasiz­e. He compared such a treatment to how HIV/AIDS is treated today.

“We’re not going to cure cancer with one therapy or even two therapies; it’s going to be drug cocktails,” Wirtz said. “That’s what saved the day with HIV/ AIDS.”

 ?? Amy David / Baltimore Sun ?? Hasini Jayatilaka and Denis Wirtz discuss their discovery that a biochemica­l signaling process that causes the spread of cancer cells can be slowed down with a “drug cocktail.”
Amy David / Baltimore Sun Hasini Jayatilaka and Denis Wirtz discuss their discovery that a biochemica­l signaling process that causes the spread of cancer cells can be slowed down with a “drug cocktail.”

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