Dr Arun Azad |
A world-first clinical trial at Monash Health Translation
Precinct, funded by a Victorian Cancer Agency (VCA) grant, will determine if a
new class of drug is effective in prostate and colorectal cancer patients.
Prostate and colorectal cancers are two of the most commonly
diagnosed cancers in Australia. More
than 3000 men die of prostate cancer and over 4100 lives are claimed by
colorectal cancer every year in Australia.
Researchers at Monash University and the Hudson Institute of
Medical Research have received a highly competitive VCA grant worth $2 million
to determine whether particular prostate and colorectal cancer patients will
respond to a new class of cancer drug known as BET inhibitors.
“BET inhibitors are a new type of therapy that can slow down
the growth of cancers by switching off cancer genes,” said lead researcher Dr
Arun Azad, Senior Research Fellow at Monash University and Consultant Medical
Oncologist at Monash Health.
Unlike chemotherapy which indiscriminately attacks ‘good’
and ‘bad’ cells, BET inhibitors—a type of epigenetic therapy—work on a genetic
level to turn off the growth of cancer cells.
“We believe that patients who have a particular biomarker
known as long non-coding RNAs may respond best to BET inhibitor therapy.”
“Importantly, we can easily identify which patients have
these long non-coding RNA biomarkers through examining their tissue sample,”
added Dr Azad.
Dr Azad believes around 50% of prostate and colorectal
cancer patients have the RNA biomarker and predicts these patients will respond
well to the new class of drug.
“While there are other trials investigating BET inhibitors,
our clinical trial is the first in the world to look at the association between
patients with RNA molecules and BET inhibitors.”
“We’re ultimately hoping to increase the range of
therapeutic options available to prostate and colorectal cancer patients,”
added Dr Azad. “This is all about
personalised medicine; we want to be able to use the right drug for the right
patient.”
The collaborative research project builds on the previous
work of Hudson Institute’s Associate Professor Ron Firestein, who identified
the RNA biomarker and potential benefit of BET inhibitors in pre-clinical models
in his previous laboratory at Genentech Inc.
“Ensuring the
effectiveness of targeted cancer therapies not only improves survival rates but
provides another option to patients who invariably develop resistance to
chemotherapy,” said Associate Professor Firestein who is also co-lead
investigator on the study.
Undertaken at Monash Health, the trial will recruit twenty
five patients with advanced prostate or colorectal cancer and for whom other
treatments options have failed.
Dr Azad said that while there is a range of drugs that work
well in prostate and colorectal cancer, patients eventually become resistant so
more options are needed.
“We need to use these treatment options the smartest way we
can and not use the scattergun chemotherapy approach where we give all patients
the same treatment, and if 20% respond, that’s great.”
“What about the other 80% of patients for whom chemo was
never going to work, who suffered unnecessary toxicity, and wasted time, effort
and a lot of money?”
Dr Azad and Associate Professor Firestein are very
optimistic about the potential for epigenetic therapies like BET inhibitors.
“If we can define which patients will respond best to
treatment, we’re genuinely personalising cancer care,” said Dr Azad.
“Personalised cancer care is the Holy Grail—everyone wins
but most importantly the patients.”
Co-collaborators on this study
include Monash University’s Professor Gail Risbridger, Associate Professor Helen
Abud, colorectal surgeon Associate Professor Paul McMurrick and Cabrini’s Dr
Simon Wilkins.
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