Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Experiment­al cancer drug can significan­tly shrink tumours in just six weeks

- By Vanessa Chalmers

An experiment­al cancer drug that targets a common genetic fault has been shown to shrink tumours by up to 67 per cent in just six weeks.

Scientists tested their newly developed anti-cancer drug AMG 510 on four patients, two of whom saw their tumours shrink. It did not work for the others.

In studies on mice, the treatment helped to shrink, and in some cases eradicate, the growing tumours.

The daily pill works by turning 'off' the KRAS gene. Mutated forms of the genes are permanentl­y trapped 'on', causing cancerous cells to multiply.

This abnormal activity fuels the developmen­t of up to 50 per cent of lung cancers, as well as some pancreatic and bowel cancers.

The pharmaceut­ical company described their findings as a 'milestone' for patients with cancer KRASmutant cancers.

The research was led by pharmaceut­ical company Amgen Research, based in Thousand Oaks, California.

The findings, published in Nature, are the first to report the effects of inhibiting KRAS with a drug.

The KRAS gene provides instructio­ns for making a protein called K-Ras that tells cells to grow and divide or mature and take on functions.

It belongs to a class of genes known as oncogenes. When mutated, oncogenes have the potential to cause normal cells to become cancerous.

AMG 510, an oral medication, stops the activity of this oncogene, Dr Jude

Canon and his colleagues at Amgen revealed.

In mouse models of KRAS-mutant cancer, the treatment helped to shrink, and in 20 per cent of the cases, eradicated the growing tumour.

Then, in the first known clinical trial of a KRAS inhibiting drug, AM510 was given to four patients with non-smallcell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) who were not responding to treatment.

In two of the patients, improvemen­ts were seen in their tumour size. However, for the other two patients it did not work.

After six weeks of treatment, the patient who received a dose of 180mg saw their tumour shrink by 34 per cent. The second patient, who had 360mg, saw a reduction of 67 per cent.

What's more, in mice with bowel cancer, the treatment made the tumour more sensitive to other cancer drugs and generated a stronger immune response - an effect known as a pro-inflammato­ry microenvir­onment.

Taken together, the results suggest the drug could work well alone or in combinatio­n with other anti-cancer strategies.

KRAS has become an attractive drug target, however pharmaceut­ical developmen­t has been hindered because a binding site isn't clear.

The team found a surface groove called His95 in KRAS. AMG 510's potency is ten-fold higher when it latches on to the groove. The drug is a 'breakthoug­h', according to Professor Terence Rabbitts, from the MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, who was not involved in the research.

©Daily Mail, London

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