San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Breakthrou­gh Research at UT Health San Antonio New hope for treating the toughest cancers

- UTHealthSA.org.

FDA-approved drugs will be safe, as they are used to treat other diseases. If the same drugs work to kill cancer cells, then they can be used in clinics right away.

T— Ratna Vadlamudi, PhD, UT Health San Antonio scientist he Mays Cancer Center at UT Health San Antonio — South Texas’ only National Cancer Institute-Designated Cancer Center — is putting a decades-old antidepres­sant drug to new use treating breast cancers that don’t respond to existing therapies.

Research in the Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine at UT Health San Antonio provided compelling evidence of the drug’s anticancer activity. The discovery led to a clinical trial that benefited 15 breast cancer patients at the Mays Cancer Center.

Imipramine, the antidepres­sant, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) in 1959 for treatment of major depressive disorder. Long prescribed to cancer patients to fight depression, researcher­s have reported anecdotall­y that it also appears to have anticancer activity, said Ratna Vadlamudi, PhD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology and co-leader of the Cancer Developmen­t and Progressio­n Program at the Mays Cancer Center.

The Vadlamudi laboratory is a training ground for tomorrow’s scientists — postdoctor­al fellows, graduate students and younger scholars. Vadlamudi, who has made many research discoverie­s in cancer, advised his protégés that the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, prioritize­s the repurposin­g of FDA-approved drugs as cancer treatments. He showed the youngest team member, Arhan Rao, a library of approved drugs. Rao studied the list and made observatio­ns. He asked if the laboratory might set its sights on imipramine. Vadlamudi and his team agreed.

The results are exciting. Imipramine inhibits triple-negative breast cancer and estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer in both mouse and human tumors. These two cancers are notoriousl­y difficult to treat in patients. Cancer Letters, a peer-reviewed journal, published the team’s results:

By reducing signaling of the hormone estrogen, imipramine stunts the growth of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers.

The drug also interferes with DNA repair, limiting the survival of triple-negative breast cancers. (DNA is a molecule that contains the genetic instructio­ns we need for our bodies to operate. Because DNA is constantly under attack from factors such as radiation from the sun, DNA repair is extremely important for all cells. Without DNA repair to help them survive, cancer cells are vulnerable.)

This solid foundation of knowledge set the table for the clinical trial directed by Virginia Kaklamani, MD, leader of the Breast Cancer Program at the Mays Cancer Center and professor of medicine in the Long School of Medicine. The clinical team gave imipramine to women newly diagnosed with breast cancer who awaited surgery.

“We typically have a window of two to three weeks or so between the diagnosis and the surgery, and this is an opportunit­y for us to give patients a drug and test to see how it does on cancer tissue,” Kaklamani said.

The care team obtains a biopsy as part of the initial diagnosis and another tissue specimen during surgery. “This affords two time points so we can see how the cancer has changed with the imipramine treatment,” Kaklamani said. “We did that in 15 patients, and overall, we were able to show that imipramine can decrease tumor growth.”

This small pilot study, funded by the Mays Cancer Center, is a preliminar­y experiment to show that imipramine is an active drug in breast cancer, Kaklamani said.

“FDA-approved drugs will be safe, as they are used to treat other diseases,” Vadlamudi said. “If the same drugs work to kill cancer cells, then they can be used in clinics right away.”

This perfectly reflects the National Cancer Institute’s goal to repurpose existing drug therapies for cancer, and it gives new hope to South Texas women — and patients worldwide — diagnosed with these hardest-to-treat breast cancers.

UT Health San Antonio has more than 1,700 ongoing research studies that involve humans, including 450 clinical trials. These clinical trials range from endodontic­s and respirator­y care to diabetes treatments and cancer therapies.

Read more about this research and other discoverie­s aimed at curing diseases at

Groundbrea­kingResear­ch.org.

The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio), a primary driver for San Antonio’s $44.1 billion health care and bioscience­s sector, is the largest research institutio­n in South Texas with an annual research portfolio of $360 million.

Driving substantia­l economic impact with its six profession­al schools, a diverse workforce of 7,900, an annual operating budget of $1.08 billion and clinical practices that provide 2.6 million patient visits each year, UT Health San Antonio plans to add more than 1,500 higher-wage jobs over the next five years to serve San Antonio, Bexar County and South Texas. To learn about the many ways “We make lives better®,” visit

 ?? ?? Ratna Vadlamudi, PhD, works with his research team at the Mays Cancer Center at UT Health San Antonio to discover new purposes for FDA-approved drugs, bringing new treatments to battle age-old diseases
Ratna Vadlamudi, PhD, works with his research team at the Mays Cancer Center at UT Health San Antonio to discover new purposes for FDA-approved drugs, bringing new treatments to battle age-old diseases
 ?? ?? Ratna Vadlamudi, PhD, co-leader of the Cancer Developmen­t and Progressio­n Program, Mays Cancer Center, UT Health San Antonio
Ratna Vadlamudi, PhD, co-leader of the Cancer Developmen­t and Progressio­n Program, Mays Cancer Center, UT Health San Antonio
 ?? ?? Virginia Kaklamani, MD, leader of the Breast Cancer Program, Mays Cancer Center, UT Health San Antonio
Virginia Kaklamani, MD, leader of the Breast Cancer Program, Mays Cancer Center, UT Health San Antonio

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