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Molecular tinkering doubles cancer drug’s efficacy

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By surrounding molecules of paclitaxel with self-assembling spheres composed of amino acids, the Duke team doubled tumour exposure to the drug compared to Abraxane while simultaneously reducing its effects on healthy tissue

Researchers have packaged a widely used cancer drug into nanoparticles, more than doubling its effectiveness at destroying tumours. The drug paclitaxel has been used for decades to fight breast, ovarian, lung and other cancers. But its effectiveness has been limited by its small molecular size and insolubility in water — properties that allow the body to clear the drug too quickly, reducing its accumulation in tumours.

Many molecular packaging systems have been developed to deliver the drug while counteracting these effects, with a protein-bound version of the drug called Abraxane currently the leading therapy. But Ashutosh Chilkoti, Professor and Chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Duke University, thought his team could do better. By surrounding molecules of paclitaxel with self-assembling spheres composed of amino acids, the Duke team doubled tumour exposure to the drug compared to Abraxane while simultaneously reducing its effects on healthy tissue. This kept mice with tumours alive significantly longer and, in some cases, completely eradicated the tumours.

The big difference between Abraxane and the Duke approach is the types of molecular bonds that are formed. In Abraxane, the paclitaxel is physically surrounded by albumin, a common blood protein. In the new packaging system, multiple copies of the drug are chemically bonded to an amino acid polypeptide, forming a water-soluble nanoparticle with the drug hidden in its core.

These nanoparticles are highly soluble in blood and are the perfect size to penetrate and accumulate in tumours where they take advantage of a tumour’s acidic environment.

Jayanta Bhattacharyya, Senior Researcher in Chilkoti’s lab and first author on the paper said, “The chemical bonds holding the polypeptide cage together are stable in blood, but dissolve in a tumour’s lower pH levels. This delivers the drug directly to the tumour and helps prevent it from randomly absorbing into healthy tissue, reducing side effects.” To test their system, Chilkoti, Bhattacharyya and their colleagues used two groups of mice. The first group had human breast cancer growing in their own mammary glands. While none of the mice treated with Abraxane survived past 85 days, most of the mice treated with the new packaging system survived past 100 days. A second group of mice had human prostate tumours growing under their skin. Similarly, while they did not survive past 60 days when treated with Abraxane, every single mouse treated with the new packaging system survived past 70 days, with some experiencing a complete cure.

As the mortality rates suggest, the Duke technology showed a higher concentration of paclitaxel in the tumours with more staying power than Abraxane, while simultaneously showing much lower levels throughout the rest of the mice’s bodies.

EP News BureauMumbai

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