Proof-of-concept study using dinutuximab and activated natural killer cells leads to a clinical trial

Proof-of-concept study using dinutuximab and activated natural killer cells leads to a clinical trial
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Neuroblastoma, a disease of immature nerve cells, is the most common solid tumor cancer occurring in children. About 700 new cases are diagnosed in the U.S. each year with approximately half of these children developing high-risk disease, which has a 40 to 50 percent chance of survival.
In 2015, the Food and Drug Administration approved a monoclonal antibody called dinutuximab for treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma. The approval followed a ground-breaking study, led by the Children’s Oncology Group and published in the New England Journal of Medicine. This pivotal trial halted enrollment earlier than planned because the therapy showed significant improvement in survival over the standard treatment.
“Although dinutuximab is a game-changing treatment in the battle against neuroblastoma, the fact remains – children are still dying from this disease,” said Eugene S. Kim, MD, surgical oncologist at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.
A team, led by Kim, designed basic research studies that would go beyond using tumor-shrinkage as a marker of efficacy and instead focus on recurrent disease and overall survival. The team’s approach was to create a model system that more faithfully replicates the patient experience.
Patients with neuroblastoma undergo surgery to remove their tumor and then have subsequent therapy. Children with resistant or recurrent disease initially improve but then their tumor returns, and they succumb to the disease. For this study, the investigators mimicked the treatment protocol and developed a new, clinically relevant model for studying metastatic disease.
In this model, metastatic tumors were surgically removed and, once the disease recurred, dinutuximab was used, along with activated human natural killer (NK) cells, which are a ”supercharged” subset of white blood cells, to actively target and kill cancer cells.
“Not only did we see tumor shrinkage, we saw a reduction in metastatic disease and a significant increase in survival,” said Kim, an associate professor of Surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. Results of the study were recently published in Clinical Cancer Research.
The findings were sufficiently compelling that they provided proof-of-concept for a clinical trial at CHLA, which will be enrolling patients in the near future. The study, which will incorporate the use of activated natural killer cells with dinutuximab therapy in patients, is led by Araz Marachelian, MD, director of the neuroblastoma program at CHLA and medical director of the New Approaches to Neuroblastoma Therapy (NANT) Consortium.
First author, Wesley E. Barry, of CHLA, received the prestigious Young Investigator Award at the 2018 Advances in Neuroblastoma Research Conference, for his work on this study. Additional contributors include Jeremy R. Jackson, Grace E. Asuelime, Hong-Wei Wu, Jianping Sun, Zesheng Wan, Jemily Malvar, Michael A. Sheard, Larry Wang, Robert C. Seeger, all of CHLA.
The study was supported by Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Institutional Start-up Funding and, in part, by grant 1 P01 CA217959 from the National Cancer Institute.
About Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Founded in 1901, Children's Hospital Los Angeles is ranked the top children’s hospital in California and sixth in the nation for clinical excellence with its selection to the prestigious U.S. News & World Report Honor Roll of children’s hospitals. Clinical care is led by physicians who are faculty members of the Keck School of Medicine of USC through an affiliation dating from 1932. The hospital also leads the largest pediatric residency training program at a freestanding children’s hospital of its kind in the western United States. The Saban Research Institute of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles encompasses basic, translational and clinical research conducted at CHLA. To learn more, follow us on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and Twitter, and visit our blog for families (CHLA.org/blog) and our research blog (ResearCHLABlog.org).
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Source: Children's Hospital Los Angeles