Newcastle and Hunter-based researchers have discovered a drug combination that could dramatically improve the life expectancy of children with brain cancer.
Diffuse Midline Gliomas (DMG), including diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas (DIPGs) are the most lethal of childhood cancers.
Responsible for being the leading cause of death in children, DMGs are a fast-growing tumour forming the part of the brain responsible for life-sustaining functions like heartbeat, breathing, swallowing, eyesight, and balance.
Palliative radiotherapy is the only established treatment, with families advised their child is expected to survive nine to 11 months post diagnosis.
Published in Cancer Research, University of Newcastle and Hunter Medical Research Institute (HMRI) researchers have uncovered the mechanisms controlling response to the promising oral therapy โONC201โ, which is currently being investigated in 12 clinical trials worldwide, across many cancer types.
One of those trials, โCombination Therapy for Diffuse Midline Gliomaโ, (research trial known as PNOC022), was established using the preclinical data largely generated by lead investigator Professor Matt Dun and his University of Newcastle research team.
โONC201 appears to improve some patient outcomes, extending median survival to 20, from 11 months,โ Professor Dun said.
Professor Dun and his team also discovered the mechanisms controlling resistance to ONC201, and a strategy to combat this through combination with a second drug, โpaxalisibโ and standard of care treatment, radiotherapy.
How the research transpired in the quest to give families hope
Using cell lines derived from DMG patient tumour samples (each with different genetic features), the University of Newcastleโs Cancer Signalling Research Group (CSRG) assessed how each tumour type responded to the therapy ONC201.
Noticing that in a subset of samples ONC201 had little or no effect, Professor Dun and the team set about assessing the mutations or gene alterations of the resistant samples to understand the cause.
Using โhigh-resolution quantitative proteomic profilingโ the group evaluated the proteins present within ONC201-treated samples, finding disruption to proteins associated with the tumour cellsโ energy systems.
Importantly, in response to this, proteins controlling the โPI3K signalling pathwayโ (promoting cell growth) increased their activity, identifying a mechanism by which DMG cells could evade ONC201โs anti-cancer effect.
A surprising response
Determining that ONC201 treatment increased the activity of the PI3K signalling pathway was surprising, particularly as Professor Dun and his team had already discovered a different drug in DMG โ โpaxalisibโ, which acts on this target.
At the time, paxalisib was already in clinical trials as a single drug treatment. The team used its DMG models to test the effect of the drugs in combination, finding them beneficial and safe, progressing the strategy to clinical trial.
Childrenโs reaction to the drug combination
Professor Dun said the oral therapy ONC201 appeared to be extending survival of patients with DMG. The teamโs research paper highlights case studies of children on the combination, some of whom have experienced a reduction in their tumour size and extension of survival.
โAs more data becomes available weโll know the extent of benefit. PNOC022 opened in the United States in 2021 and Australia in 2022, and is now also recruiting in New Zealand, The Netherlands, Switzerland and Israel,โ he said.
Currently, approximately 100 children are receiving ONC201+paxalisib combination therapy worldwide. The trial is designed in a unique way โ it is open to patients at all disease stages (irrespective of past treatments) and is โadaptiveโ โ new drugs or approaches can be evaluated as additional arms of the trial as supporting data becomes available.
Combining the power of anti-cancer therapies
Professor Dun said their specialist techniques had revealed how two emerging therapies exerted their anti-cancer effect, particularly, the mechanisms controlling whether a patient responded, and the benefits of using them in combination.
โWe are continuing to study these drugs in our lab-based DMG models so we can understand how to improve the number of people who respond, or the length/robustness of response a patient might experience, to improve survival outcomes.
The road ahead to optimisation
Professor Dun said knowing how these drugs work was key to making sure as many patients benefit as possible. The research team is studying how to optimise therapy to ensure children receive the maximum tolerated dose without side effects.
โThis involves additional supportive medicines, manipulating the dose schedule and further investigation into how to enhance response in resistant tumours,โ Professor Dun said.
โThirteen is the number of years that gets thrown around as the time it takes to move research findings from bench to bedside. Iโd really like to highlight that our dedicated efforts have achieved this in less than five.
โBut, in my mind, that is still too long. Kids and their families who are told they have DIPG or DMG are advised to โgo home and make memoriesโ, that thereโs no treatments available,โ Professor Dun said.
โThis leaves families with no hope โ an indispensable element when dealing with a cancer diagnosis. The path to move our findings from the lab to the clinic has happened with a number of international collaborators on board. It will be great to build on that spirit of collaboration in Australia so more of the great work being done locally can improve survival of kids with cancer.โ
The paper โONC201 in combination with paxalisib for the treatment of H3K27-altered diffuse midline gliomaโ is published in Cancer Research.
HMRI would like to acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live, the Awabakal and Worimi peoples, and pay our respects to Elders past and present. We recognise and respect their cultural heritage and beliefs and their continued connection to their land.
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