• New drug delays progression of glioma, a

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Mon Jun 5 22:30:44 2023
    New drug delays progression of glioma, a deadly brain cancer
    Study is first clinical trial analyzing a targeted therapy drug
    specifically developed to treat brain tumors

    Date:
    June 5, 2023
    Source:
    University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences
    Summary:
    Scientists have shown that a new targeted therapy drug can extend
    the amount of time people with a subtype of glioma are on treatment
    without their cancer worsening. The finding suggests a possible
    new treatment option for people with the slow-growing but deadly
    brain tumor.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In an international study co-led by UCLA, scientists have shown that a
    new targeted therapy drug can extend the amount of time people with a
    subtype of glioma are on treatment without their cancer worsening. The
    finding suggests a possible new treatment option for people with the slow-growing but deadly brain tumor.

    The team found the drug vorasidenib more than doubled progression-free
    survival in people with recurrent grade 2 glioma with IDH1 and IDH2
    mutations. Compared with people who received a placebo, those who took vorasidenib went for nearly 17 more months without their cancer worsening, delaying the time before they needed to begin chemotherapy and radiation.

    The results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine and
    presented today at the annual meeting of the American Society Clinical
    Oncology in Chicago.

    The type of glioma studied in the paper, recurrent grade 2 glioma with
    IDH1 and IDH2 mutations, tends to affect younger people, often those in
    their 30s. The current standard treatment, a combination of radiation
    and chemotherapy, can cause neurological deficits that make it hard for patients to learn, remember new things, concentrate or make everyday
    decisions -- all of which can be especially challenging for people who
    have young families or are in the early years of their professional lives.

    Dr. Timothy Cloughesy, a professor of neuro-oncology at the David
    Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and co-senior author of the study,
    said the availability of a treatment that enables patients to go for
    longer periods of time between chemotherapy and radiation treatments
    could have a major impact.

    "We're always concerned about the delayed effects of radiation," said Cloughesy, who is also a member of the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center. "Having the ability to hold off on getting radiation therapy
    to the brain with an effective therapy is really critical and very
    meaningful to this population of patients." Vorasidenib is classified
    as a dual inhibitor of mutant IDH1/2, meaning that it prevents the
    formation and accumulation of the onco-metabolite 2- Hydroxyglutarate,
    or 2-HG, that occurs when genetically altered versions of two enzymes,
    IDH1 and IDH2, are present in a tumor. 2-HG is thought to be responsible
    for the formation and maintenance of IDH-mutant gliomas.

    The study is also the first clinical trial to analyze a targeted therapy
    drug specifically developed to treat brain cancer.

    Targeted therapies are designed to target specific molecules that are
    involved in the growth and spread of cancer cells. Unlike chemotherapy
    and other therapies that can affect both cancerous and healthy cells,
    targeted therapies only attack cancer cells with the mutated target
    while minimizing damage to normal cells.

    While there has been great progress in using targeted therapies to treat
    many types of cancer, development of targeted therapies for brain tumors
    has been especially challenging because of the difficulty of getting
    through the blood- brain barrier. Vorasidenib is a brain-penetrant
    inhibitor, which means that it has the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier.

    The study involved 331 people aged 12 and older who had been diagnosed
    with recurrent grade 2 glioma with the IDH1 and IDH2 mutations and who
    had undergone brain tumor surgery. From that group, 168 were randomly
    assigned to receive vorasidenib and 163 received placebos.

    Among those who received vorasidenib, the disease did not progress for
    an average of 27.7 months, significantly longer than the 11.1 months for
    those who received the placebo. And among those who received vorasidenib,
    85.6% went for 18 months before their next treatment, while 83.4% went
    for 24 months between treatments.

    The disease progressed in just 28% of people receiving vorasidenib,
    compared to 54% of those receiving placebos. And as of September 2022,
    which was 30 months after the study began, 72% of patients who were in
    the vorasidenib group were still taking the drug and their disease had
    not progressed.

    For patients who were originally in the placebo group whose cancer
    began to progress during the study, doctors permitted a switch to
    vorasidenib. The researchers observed limited adverse side effects from vorasidenib. "This is the first targeted treatment that shows unequivocal efficacy in this population and is precedent-setting for this disease," Cloughesy said.

    Benjamin Ellingson, director of the UCLA Brain Tumor Imaging Laboratory
    and a member of the Jonsson Cancer Center, was a key participant in
    the research that led to the clinical trial. He was involved in the radiographic evaluation of tumors in the study, which confirmed that
    there was a benefit of the targeted therapy. The study's first author
    is Dr. Ingo Mellinghoff of Memorial Sloan- Kettering Cancer Center. The co-senior author is Dr. Patrick Wen of the Dana- Farber Cancer Institute.

    The study was sponsored by Servier Pharmaceuticals, which manufactures vorasidenib. The drug has not yet been approved by the FDA for clinical
    use.

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    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_California_-_Los_Angeles_Health_Sciences.

    Original written by Denise Heady. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Ingo K. Mellinghoff, Martin J. van den Bent, Deborah T. Blumenthal,
    Mehdi
    Touat, Katherine B. Peters, Jennifer Clarke, Joe Mendez, Shlomit
    Yust- Katz, Liam Welsh, Warren P. Mason, Franc,ois Ducray, Yoshie
    Umemura, Burt Nabors, Matthias Holdhoff, Andreas F. Hottinger,
    Yoshiki Arakawa, Juan M.

    Sepulveda, Wolfgang Wick, Riccardo Soffietti, James R. Perry,
    Pierre Giglio, Macarena de la Fuente, Elizabeth A. Maher, Steven
    Schoenfeld, Dan Zhao, Shuchi S. Pandya, Lori Steelman, Islam
    Hassan, Patrick Y. Wen, Timothy F. Cloughesy. Vorasidenib in IDH1-
    or IDH2-Mutant Low-Grade Glioma. New England Journal of Medicine,
    2023; DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2304194 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230605181002.htm

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