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By Rebecca V. Snowden New drugs called PARP inhibitors appear to have a lot of promise
against hereditary cancers caused by BRCA1 and BRCA2 cell
mutations.
PARP inhibitors work by blocking the action of poly
(ADP-ribose) polymerase, an enzyme that helps repair DNA. In certain
tumor cells, such as those from BRCA1
and BRCA2
mutation carriers, blocking this enzyme can lead to cell death.
People who carry BRCA1
and BRCA2 mutations
are at a higher risk of developing many cancers, including breast,
ovarian, and prostate cancers. Scientists hope PARP drugs can be used
to effectively target the cancer cells in those people without
destroying their healthy cells, minimizing harsh side effects.
In a small phase I study, researchers at the Institute of
Cancer Research in Sutton, England tested the action of a PARP drug
called olaparib in 60 patients, 22 of whom were known carriers of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation,
and 1 who likely was a carrier. The patients started with a dose of 10
mg of the drug orally once daily, for 2 of every 3 weeks, then the dose
and length of treatment were gradually increased to find the best way
of giving the drug.
The study group included 20 men and 40 women with different
types of cancer -- ovarian, breast, colorectal, prostate, melanoma, as
well as some other types. About half had had more than 4 previous
cancer treatments.
Twelve patients with inherited BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations saw
their tumors shrink or stop growing. These patients all had ovarian,
breast, or prostate cancer. The drug had no effect on patients who were
not BRCA1
or BRCA2
carriers.
Side effects were minimal compared to traditional chemotherapy
drugs and included nausea (32%), fatigue (30%), and vomiting (20%).
The findings are so promising they were published recently in The New England Journal of
Medicine, which typically doesn't publish results from
early phase I studies. An accompanying editorial calls the drugs "a new
direction in cancer-drug development."
And PARP drugs appear to be effective against other cancers,
as well.
Another study, which was presented recently at the Annual
Meeting of American Society of Clinical Oncology, found that the PARP
drug BSI-201 improved survival in women with triple-negative breast
cancer compared to traditional chemo. Because triple-negative breast
cancer lacks certain receptors, it doesn't respond to hormone therapy
or drugs that target HER2, such as Herceptin.
However, while these findings are very encouraging, PARP drugs
are still in the early stages of development and more testing is
needed.
Reviewed by:
Members of the ACS
Medical Content Staff
Citation:
"Inhibition of Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase in Tumors From BRCA Mutation
Carriers." Published June 26, 2009 in The New England Journal of
Medicine. First author: Peter C. Fong, MD.
"Synthetic Lethality – A New Direction in Cancer-Drug
Development." Published June 26, 2009 in The New England Journal of
Medicine. J. Dirk Inglehart, MD and Daniel P. Silver, MD,
PhD.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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