Timing may be decisive when it comes to overcoming cancer's ability to evade treatment.
By hitting breast cancer cells with a targeted therapeutic immediately after chemotherapy, researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) were able to target cancer cells during a transitional stage when they were most vulnerable, killing cells and shrinking tumours in the lab and in pre-clinical models.
The team reported their findings in Nature Communications.
"We were studying the fundamentals of how resistance develops and looking to understand what drives relapse. What we found is a new paradigm for thinking about chemotherapy," said senior author Shiladitya Sengupta, PhD, associate bioengineer at BWH.
Previous studies have examined cancer stem cells (CSCs) – small populations of cells within a tumour that are resistant to chemotherapy.
Sengupta and his colleagues took breast cancer cells that did not have the markings of CSCs and exposed them to docetaxel, a common chemotherapy drug.
The team found that after exposure to chemotherapy, the cells began developing physical markings usually seen in CSCs, including receptors on the cell surface to which specific proteins can bind.
These "markers of stemness" suggested that the cells were transitioning into a different state, during which time they might be vulnerable to other cancer drugs.
To test this, the researchers treated the cells with a variety of targeted therapeutics immediately after chemotherapy.
The researchers observed that two drugs each killed a large fraction of the cells that had begun transitioning: dasatinib, a drug that targets the Src Family Kinase (SFK) and RK20449, a new drug in pre-clinical testing that specifically targets one of the SFK proteins called Hck.
The researchers confirmed these findings in a mammary carcinoma mouse model – treatment with dasatinib just a few days after administering two high doses of chemotherapy prevented tumour growth and increased survival rates.
Treating cells simultaneously with docetaxal and dasatinib or administering dasatinib after a longer period of time did not produce the same effects.
The researchers theorise that the cancer cells go through a temporary transition state, which means that administering the drugs in a very specific timeframe and sequence is important.
"By treating with chemotherapy, we're driving cells through a transition state and creating vulnerabilities," said first author Aaron Goldman, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in biomedical engineering at BWH.
"This opens up the door: we can then try out different combinations and regimens to find the most effective way to kill the cells and inhibit tumour growth."
To make these observations, the researchers developed and leveraged three-dimensional "explants" tissue derived from a patient's tumour biopsy and grown in serum from that specific patient for research purposes.
This model mimics the tumours' microenvironment and preserves the tumours' cellular diversity.
In a continuation of this work, Goldman is also using mathematical modelling to pursue the most effective dose of chemotherapy to induce the vulnerable transition state of the cancer cell demonstrated in this research.
"Our goal is to build a regimen that will be efficacious for clinical trials," said Goldman.
"Once we understand specific timing, sequence of drug delivery and dosage better, it will be easier to translate these findings clinically."
Source: Brigham and Women's Hospital