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PI3K as a target in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours

21 Jun 2016
PI3K as a target in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours

Researchers from the 'Angiogenesis signaling pathways' research group of the Institute of Biomedical Investigation of Bellvitge (IDIBELL), led by Dr. Mariona Graupera, have unveiled the potential therapeutic benefit of a selective inhibitor of the PI3-kinase (PI3K) protein in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (PanNETs).

The study, published in Clinical Cancer Research, provides a significant advance in understanding the role of PI3K

Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours, often referred to as "islet cell tumours" are a type of cancer that arises from hormone-releasing cells in the pancreas.

They account for approximately 2 percent of new pancreatic cancer cases.

Over the past 2 decades, few effective treatments for this cancer type have been identified, as PanNETs' heterogeneity has complicated the design of targeted therapies.

It is known that mutations in the PI3K protein signalling pathway occur in 16% of patients with PanNETs; in the present study, the researchers assessed the frequency of PI3K pathway activation in 40 human tumour samples and in a mice model of PanNETs, and they investigated the therapeutic efficacy of inhibiting this pathway in mice using PI3K generic and isoform-specific inhibitors.

Dr. Graupera's team found that either genetic or pharmacological inhibition of only one specific PI3K isoform, called p110α, is enough to induce tumour cell death and compromises vessel growth, which blocks tumour progression and metastasis.

This is particularly relevant given that isoform-selective inhibitors are likely to exhibit lower toxicity compared to generic inhibitors, and therefore higher drug doses that are capable of achieving complete inhibition of the pathway may be tolerated.

These results not only show promise on a new targeted therapy to treat this malignancy, as PI3K inhibitors are already used in the clinical practice, but also unravel a new function of the PI3K kinase in cancer biology through its role in promoting metastasis.

The research group will now focus on comparing the efficacy of this therapy with other targeted therapies in patients with PI3K mutations.

Source: Clinical Cancer Research