Drug with new approach on impeding DNA repair shows promising results: Study

By ANI | Published: June 21, 2020 11:16 PM2020-06-21T23:16:26+5:302020-06-21T23:35:12+5:30

Patients with high-grade serious ovarian cancer (HGSOC) who were treated with the drug, berzosertib, and chemotherapy lived substantially longer before their disease began to worsen than did those treated with chemotherapy alone, according to a recent study.

Drug with new approach on impeding DNA repair shows promising results: Study | Drug with new approach on impeding DNA repair shows promising results: Study

Drug with new approach on impeding DNA repair shows promising results: Study

Patients with high-grade serious ovarian cancer (HGSOC) who were treated with the drug, berzosertib, and chemotherapy lived substantially longer before their disease began to worsen than did those treated with chemotherapy alone, according to a recent study.

The clinical trial led by investigators at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute was detailed in the journal The Lancet Oncology.

The findings may set the stage for testing berzosertib - an inhibitor of the ATR protein - in a range of other cancers, investigators say.

"Our results in his phase 2 trial suggest that ATR inhibition in combination with chemotherapy has the potential to offer significant benefit to patients with chemotherapy-resistant HGSOC and, potentially, other tumour types where ATR plays a key role," said the study's lead author, Panagiotis Konstantinopoulos, MD, PhD, director of translational research, Gynecologic Oncology, at Dana-Farber.

Berzosertib is designed to take advantage of one of the most glaring vulnerabilities of some cancer cells. Like a tractor run non-stop, a tumour cell, driven by a constant imperative to proliferate, is apt to need frequent repairs. In a tumour cell, that involves fixing broken strands of DNA.

HGSOC, like other types of cancer, relies heavily on the ATR protein in making those repairs. That reliance becomes even greater when these cancers are treated with chemotherapy, which disrupts the cells' ability to copy their DNA.

"The unbridled growth of cancer cells places enormous stress on the process of DNA replication. ATR helps them survive that stress: its job is to coordinate the halting of the cell cycle to check if the DNA is intact or needs repair. Drugs that inhibit ATR - that deprive tumour cells of such repair - have the potential to be particularly effective in some cancers," Konstantinopoulos explained.

In the study, investigators at 11 cancer centres around the country enrolled 70 patients with HGSOC that was resistant to platinum-based chemotherapy. Half the participants were randomly assigned to receive the standard chemotherapy agent gemcitabine alone and half received gemcitabine in combination with berzosertib.

The estimated median progression-free survival of patients receiving gemcitabine alone - the period in which their disease was in retreat or stable - was 14.7 weeks. For those receiving gemcitabine and berzosertib, it was 22.9 weeks. Among patients with the most platinum-resistant tumours (i.e. those who had progressed within 3 months from prior platinum-based chemotherapy), the difference was even greater: 9 weeks for gemcitabine versus 27.7 weeks for gemcitabine and berzosertib.

Side effects were similar in the two groups. Those receiving the combination therapy, however, had a higher rate of thrombocytopenia, or low blood platelet levels.

( With inputs from ANI )

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