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How This Cancer Drug Could Make Radiation a Slam Dunk Therapy

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Now, UC San Francisco scientists have developed a way to deliver radiation just to cancerous cells. The therapy combines a drug to mark the cancer cells for destruction and a radioactive antibody to kill them.

It wiped out bladder and lung tumors in mice without causing lethargy or weight loss – the typical side effects of radiation therapy.

“This is a one-two punch,” said Charly Craik, PhD, a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at UCSF and co-senior author of the study, which appears Dec. 10 in Cancer Research. “We could potentially kill the tumors before they can develop resistance.”

A cancer drug becomes a molecular flag for cancer

The project began 10 years ago when UCSF’s Kevan Shokat, PhD, discovered how to attack KRAS, a notorious cancer-causing protein. When mutated, KRAS spurs out-of-control cell growth. Such mutations lead to up to a third of all cancer.

Unlike external beam radiation, this method uses only the amount of radiation needed to beat the cancer.”

Charly Craik, PhD

Shokat’s breakthrough led to the development of drugs that latched onto cancerous KRAS. But the drugs could only shrink tumors for a few months before the cancer came roaring back.

The drugs stayed bound to KRAS, however, and Craik, wondered whether they might make cancer cells more “visible” to the immune system.

“We suspected early on that the KRAS drugs might serve as permanent flags for cancer cells,” Craik said.

In 2022, a UCSF team that included Craik and Shokat demonstrated this was indeed possible.

The team designed an antibody that recognized the unique drug/KRAS surface fragment and beckoned to immune cells.

But the approach needed the immune system to have the strength to beat the cancer by itself, which turned out not to be that effective.

Bringing atomic-level radiation to cancer cells

Around the same time, Craik began working with Mike Evans, PhD, a professor of radiology at UCSF, to develop a different approach to destroy cancer cells.

They still used the K-RAS drug to flag cancerous cells, but this time they armed the antibodies with radioactive payloads.

The combination worked, eliminating lung cancer in mice with minimal side effects.

“Radiation is ruthlessly efficient in its ability to ablate cancer cells, and with this approach, we’ve shown that we can direct it exclusively to those cancers,” Evans said.

Added Craik, “The beauty of this approach is that we can calculate an extremely safe dose of radiation. Unlike external beam radiation, this method uses only the amount of radiation needed to beat the cancer.”

A radiation therapy for all patients

To make this therapy work in most patients, scientists will have to develop antibodies that account for the different ways that people’s cells display KRAS.

The UCSF team is now working on this – motivated by their own evidence that it can work.

Kliment Verba, PhD, an assistant professor of cellular and molecular pharmacology at UCSF, used cryo-electron microscopy to visualize the ‘radiation sandwich’ in atomic detail, giving the field a structure to develop even better antibodies.

“The drug bound to the KRAS peptide sticks out like a sore thumb, which the antibody then grabs,” said Verba, who like Craik is a member of UCSF’s Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI). “We’ve taken a significant step toward patient-specific radiation therapies, which could lead to a new paradigm for treatment.”

Authors: In addition to Craik, Evans, and Verba, other UCSF authors are Apurva Pandey, PhD, Peter J. Rohweder, PhD, Lieza M. Chan, Chayanid Ongpipattanakul, PhD, Dong hee Chung, PhD, Bryce Paolella, Fiona M. Quimby, Ngoc Nguyen, MS.

Funding and disclosures: This work was supported by the NIH (T32 GM 064337, P41-GM103393, S10OD020054, S10OD021741, and S10OD026881), the UCSF Innovation Ventures Philanthropy Fund, the UCSF Marcus Program in Precision Medicine, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Craik, Evans, and Rohweder are inventors on a patent application covering part of this work and owned by UCSF. Craik, Ongpipattanakul, and Rohweder are inventors on a patent application related to this technology owned by UCSF. Craik and Rohweder are co-founders and shareholders of Hap10Bio and Evans and Paolella are shareholders of Hap1

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11 Replies
Xavier10 profile image
Xavier10

Those lucky mice always get the first chance

Boacan profile image
Boacan

Any information regarding when this study will be available for future clinical trials or move from mice to human cancer patients?

Carlosbach profile image
Carlosbach

Look at me, I'm a mouse. As a mouse where do I go for treatment?

Seriously, sounds very promising Scout. Thanks

CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply toCarlosbach

Come on over to our place. Research lab is just a couple blocks away. Lots of Hickory trees on the way.

Seriously here too lol. I'm assuredly bias and the radioactive tx doesnt work for everyone but Pluvicto is working very well for me.

I copied the first couple paragraphs from a entertaining, informative, confirmative article and put the link to the full article at the bottom. A easy to digest read.

n a Wednesday morning in late January 1896, at a small light bulb factory in Chicago, a middle-aged woman named Rose Lee found herself at the heart of a groundbreaking medical endeavor. With an X-ray tube positioned above the tumor in her left breast, Lee was treated with a torrent of high-energy particles that penetrated into the malignant mass.

“And so,” as her treating clinician later wrote, “without the blaring of trumpets or the beating of drums, X-ray therapy was born.”

Radiation therapy has come a long way since those early beginnings. The discovery of radium and other radioactive metals opened the doors to administering higher doses of radiation to target cancers located deeper within the body. The introduction of proton therapy later made it possible to precisely guide radiation beams to tumors, thus reducing damage to surrounding healthy tissues — a degree of accuracy that was further refined through improvements in medical physics, computer technologies and state-of-the-art imaging techniques.

But it wasn’t until the new millennium, with the arrival of targeted radiopharmaceuticals, that the field achieved a new level of molecular precision. These agents, akin to heat-seeking missiles programmed to hunt down cancer, journey through the bloodstream to deliver their radioactive warheads directly at the tumor site.

knowablemagazine.org/conten...

OVER TO OUR PLACE
Carlosbach profile image
Carlosbach in reply toCAMPSOUPS

Camps,

Thank you, thank you ver much.

I'm on my way, but since I'm hitchhiking I don't know when I will arrive. To speed up my travels I have enhanced my groin, and I plan to do a few shakes of the old pelvis while singing "I'm all shook up." I'm hoping this will help me attract potential rides. If I don't show, tell the authorities to start searching the I-80 in the area around Rock Springs, WY.

If I do make it, I won't be dressed as the King. I plan to switch into my Chucky Cheese get up once I cross the state line.

Seriously, I am so glad that Pluvicto is working for you. Due to feedback from our community, I had downgraded it on my list of potential future treatments, but your experience is extremely encouraging.

Elvis has left Washington...

Elvis hitchiking
CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply toCarlosbach

Funny stuff you said there brother. Aaah. Only big thing in my groin is lymph node discharge swelling lol. Or feminine fat lol.

My dad had a stint at Boeing in Seattle. During the time the saying was "last one to leave Seattle turn the lights out". lol.

But I loved the brief Washington, Seattle life. Had the great opportunity in my adult life to include time off with a business trip to Wenatchee Wa. Man that was cool. The old suburb and grocery store parking lot where I would take my skateboard (notice I didnt say where I went skateboarding lol). The old house and school. Route I walked to school. Friends old houses. Oddly the greenery, the flowers gave me a "in Japan vibe". Maybe thats part of what made me love Japan so much after years of being away from Seattle. Then off to the job in Wenatchee. Took the I-90 to see Snoqualmie and the scenic drive on the way there. Took Hwy 2 on the way back to Seattle for scenery and a look at Stevens pass. Back in Seattle again I had a couple days and checked out all the old haunts. Space Needle. Fishermans Wharf/Pikes Market. Jimmy's statue (glad its there but wish it was a better caricature--IMHO ).

My parents were the snow skiers back in the 50's and 60's. Snoqualmie was a name often repeated for years after we moved. And Stevens Pass. Trips there appear in some old home movies.

Anyway. Anywho. My service trips were pretty much: The customer job site. The hotel. And the nearby bar and grill. So this kinda thing was pretty special.

Carlosbach profile image
Carlosbach in reply toCAMPSOUPS

Pulled on a lot of my memories’ strings there Camps. My wife and I took our first trip to Seattle in the late 80’s - and had a blast. We enjoyed Pike Place Market, sightseeing, and several great meals on the piers. After I started work as a consultant in 1994, our kids were in school, so I tried to limit my work to the west coast. I had several clients in the Seattle area and got to throw a party at the Space Needle, speak at the convention center, and climb around in unsavory manufacturing facilities.

I only stayed in Wenatchee once, and we spent most of our time up in the faux Bavarian village of Leavenworth, and out at lake Chelan. Beautiful area as I remember it. I’m glad that you had the chance to revisit it.

After the kids left home I started to take longer trips, further from home. I can identify with the customer job site. The hotel. And the nearby bar and grill. Did that a lot, but I also pushed myself to get out and see the area when I had the energy. For example, I was in Minneapolis in September 2017 when I noticed lots of purple jerseys on the Metro during my ride back to my hotel. Went on stub hub and snagged a ticket lower level for the Monday night opening game between the Vikes and the Saints. Great game, Bradford, AP’s last game as a vike, Diggs, Theilen, Drew Brees, Randy Moss Ring of Honor ceremony, etc. Lucked out there for sure.

Later that week I went with a group of trainees to a Twins game at the Target Center. Exceptional week for work travel QOL.

Minnesota Vikings Game
CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply toCarlosbach

I thought there was a connect. You with Oregon and your nod to Elvis leaving Washington.

Pretty wild we have both been to Wenatchee. I drove around that Bavarian Village it was quite the site especially with the mountains looming over it.

j-o-h-n profile image
j-o-h-n

Three cheers for the mice..........

Good Luck, Good Health and Good Humor.

j-o-h-n

inthefight profile image
inthefight

Very, very interesting.

Tony666 profile image
Tony666

Is this really the same idea as LU-177 (pluvicto)? In lung cancer the target is KRAS. In LU-177 the target is PSMA. But otherwise the same?

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