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Study determines efficacy of novel T-cell leukaemia drugs

25 Oct 2016
Study determines efficacy of novel T-cell leukaemia drugs

Researchers have determined that two Phase 1 drugs (CX-4945 and JQ1) can work together to efficiently kill T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia cells while having minimal impact on normal blood cells.

Although both drugs were previously tested as single agents in clinical trials to treat cancers, the success of the combined actions on cancer cells was previously unknown until now.

The findings appear in the journal Haematologica.

Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, also known as acute lymphocytic leukaemia or acute lymphoid leukaemia, is a form of cancer of the white blood cells, characterised by the overproduction and accumulation of cancerous, immature white blood cells, known as lymphoblasts.

Despite treatment improvement, T-cell leukaemia remains fatal in 20 percent of paediatric and 50 percent of adult patients.

Both CX-4945 and JQ1 are in clinical trials now as single agents to treat solid and haematological cancers.

"Previous studies provided us a rationale to test the combination of CX-4945 and JQ1 on refractory/relapsed T-cell leukaemia," said corresponding author Hui Feng, MD, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacology & experimental therapeutics at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM). "Our findings suggest that the combination treatment of CX-4945 and JQ1 could be an effective strategy to target refractory/relapsed T-cell leukaemia," she added.

According to the researchers the efficacy of using a combination of JQ1 and CX-4945 in treating other cancers should also be investigated.

Source: Haematologica