22 Apr Anti-Hypertension Drug Prazosin May Inhibit Glioblastoma Brain Tumor Cells
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Hervé Chneiweiss MD PhD
Bâtiment A3 pièce 336 Case courrier 2 Plasticité Gliale et Tumeurs cérébrales Neuroscience Paris Seine (directeur) Inserm/Université Pierre et Marie Curie
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Chneiweiss: Treatments available for glioblastoma — malignant brain tumors — have little effect. An international collaboration[1] led by the Laboratoire Neurosciences Paris-Seine (CNRS/ INSERM/UPMC)[2] tested active ingredients from existing medications and eventually identified one compound of interest, prazosin, on these tumors.
We chose to study the most common malignant tumors that develop from brain cells, glioblastomas, which represent the fourth most frequent cause of cancer deaths among adults and the second in children. This is due to the inefficacy of current treatments. Indeed, a glioblastoma can resist treatment and reawaken from a very small number of tumor cells called glioblastoma-initiating cells (GIC). It is these cells — whose characteristics and properties resemble those of stem cells — that were targeted in the study.
Rather than trying to discover new compounds, the team opted for repositioning existing drugs. In other words, we tested a collection of substances used for so long to treat other conditions that their patents have now fallen into the public domain[3]. This method makes it possible to develop new active ingredients cheaply and very rapidly. Twelve hundred compounds were thus tested on normal human neural stem cells and on glioblastoma-initiating cells from different aggressive tumors. Twelve of these compounds showed a toxic effect on GIC — and none on the normal neural stem cells. The most effective was prazosin. Tested in mice carrying glioblastoma-initiating cells, prazosin significantly reduced the size of tumors and prolonged survival of the mice by more than 50%.
[1] Including scientists from the Laboratoire d’Innovation Thérapeutique (CNRS/Université de Strasbourg), the Stanford University Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine (USA) and the Instituto Estadual do Cérebro Paulo Niemeyer in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil).
[2] This laboratory forms part of the Institut de Biologie Paris-Seine.
[3] Pharmaceutical compounds are protected by a patent for 20 years after their discovery. Because of the length of the clinical trials that are necessary before a drug can be put on the market, the duration of their patent protection does not normally exceed 10-15 years after a Marketing Authorization (MA) is granted.
MedicalResearch.com: What should clinicians and patients take away from your report?
Dr. Chneiweiss: This compound, which has been used for many years to treat hypertension, is an alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonist. Nonetheless we made a surprising finding: glioblastoma-initiating cells are devoid of these receptors. The compound therefore acts via an “off-target” mechanism, or in other words through another pathway than standard interaction. The scientists thus identified an intracellular signaling molecule, PKCδ, which is over-expressed in GIC when compared with normal neural stem cells. In the presence of prazosin, it is only cleaved in GIC, which leads to their death.
MedicalResearch.com: What recommendations do you have for future research as a result of this study?
Dr. Chneiweiss: Clinical trials will be initiated this year to confirm these findings. If they are conclusive, the compound could rapidly be introduced to complement existing therapies and improve the management of patients with brain cancer. Already, the scientists have discovered that other cancer cells display altered PKCδ signaling, including those in colorectal, pancreatic and liver cancer. Understanding the mechanism of action of prazosin may therefore pave the way for the development of new potential treatments for other cancers.
Citation:
Assad Kahn, S. L. Costa, S. Gholamin, R. T. Nitta, L. G. Dubois, M. Feve, M. Zeniou, P. L. C. Coelho, E. El-Habr, J. Cadusseau, P. Varlet, S. S. Mitra, B. Devaux, M.-C. Kilhoffer, S. H. Cheshier, V. Moura-Neto, J. Haiech, M.-P. Junier, H. Chneiweiss. The anti-hypertensive drug prazosin inhibits glioblastoma growth via the PKC -dependent inhibition of the AKT pathway. EMBO Molecular Medicine, 2016; DOI: 10.15252/emmm.201505421
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Last Updated on April 22, 2016 by Marie Benz MD FAAD