Karmanos Cancer Institute Researchers Study New Drug Combinations to Treat Childhood Leukemia
Abstract #4061
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20071106/KARMANOSLOGO)
Yubin Ge, Ph.D., and
AML, which originates in bone marrow, accounts for one-fourth of acute leukemia in children and is responsible for more than half of the leukemia deaths in this population. Approximately 600 children are diagnosed with AML each year, according to Dr. Ge and presently there is no effective drug treatment for those children should they relapse.
“Right now, we are at a bottleneck,” Dr. Ge said. “We really want to find a better treatment for those relapsed cases.”
Dr. Ge and fellow researchers considered drugs that are already FDA-approved to help fight AML. Resistance among patients to FDA-approved cytarabine is a major cause of treatment failure in AML. Scientists considered clofarabine, approved by the FDA in 2004, and paired it with valproic acid (VPA), typically used to treat epilepsy. They found the two drugs worked together to dramatically stimulate cell death.
“We considered an old drug for a new use,” Dr. Ge said. “It looks like the increased drug activity or synergy is not due to the transport or delivery of clofarabine, but to enhanced cell death. We were so pleased with the results.”
AML afflicts mostly adults — about 10,000 new cases each year — and strikes older children. Acute lymphoblastic leukemia usually affects children between the ages of 2 to 5 and is generally easier to treat. Treatment advancements for AML, however, have been less successful.
Dr. Ge said researchers at Karmanos discovered the synergy between VPA and clofarabine only a few months ago, though departmental research has spanned some 15 years in the field of treating childhood leukemias. The current research represents a unique partnership between Dr. Ge, his Karmanos colleagues, and
Dr. Ge expects that their findings will move into the clinical phase in the next few years. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in
“This is truly translational research,” Dr. Ge said. “We really want to translate what we do in the laboratory to the clinic and hopefully save more lives.”
Located in mid-town
SOURCE Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute
