Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Researchers Starve Triple Negative Breast Cancer With Drug in Clinical Trials

From A News Release from Science Daily
Brazilian researchers have developed a strategy that slows the growth of triple negative breast cancer cells by cutting them off from two major food sources.
Triple-negative breast cancer, or TNBC, makes up approximately 15% to 20% of all breast cancers and is most common in African American women. These tumors lack estrogen and progesterone receptors and HER2 protein which are present in other breast cancers and permit certain targeted therapies. And because every TNBC tumor has a different genetic makeup, finding new markers that could guide treatment has been a difficult task.
"There is intense interest in finding new medications that can treat this kind of breast cancer," said Sandra Martha Gomes Dias, a cancer researcher at the Brazilian Biosciences National Laboratory in Campinas, Brazil. "TNBC is considered to be more aggressive and have a poorer prognosis than other types of breast cancer, mainly because there are fewer targeted medicines that treat TNBC."
In a new study in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Dias and colleagues demonstrate that in addition to glutamine, a well-known cancer food source, TNBC cells can use fatty acids to grow and survive. When inhibitors that block both glutamine and fatty acid metabolism were used in concert, TNBC growth and migration slowed, Dias said.
To maintain their ability to grow at a breakneck pace, cancer cells consume nutrients at an increased rate. Glutamine, which is the most abundant amino acid in plasma, is one of them. Some types of cancer become heavily reliant on this versatile molecule as it offers energy, carbon, nitrogen, and antioxidant properties, all of which support tumor growth and survival, Dias said.
The drug Telaglenastat, also known as CB-839, prevents the processing of glutamine and is currently in clinical trials to treat TNBC and other tumor types. CB-839 works by deactivating the enzyme glutaminase, preventing cancer cells from breaking down and reaping the benefits of glutamine. However, recent research has shown that some TNBC cells can resist the drug treatment.
To see if alterations in gene expression could explain how these cells survive, the authors of the study exposed TNBC cells to CB-839, defined those that were resistant and those that were sensitive to the drug, and sequenced their RNA, Dias said.
In the resistant cells, molecular pathways related to the processing of lipids were highly altered, Dias said. In particular, levels of the enzymes CPT1 and CPT2, which are critical for fatty acid metabolism, were increased.
"CPT1 and 2 act as gateways for the entrance of fatty acids into mitochondria, where they will be used as fuel for energy production," Dias said. "Our hypothesis was that closing this gateway by inhibiting CPT1 in combination with glutaminase inhibition would decrease growth and migration of CB-839-resistant TNBC cells."
The double inhibition proved significant as it slowed proliferation and migration in resistant TNBC cells more than individual inhibition of either CPT1 or glutaminase. These results provide new genetic markers that could better guide drug choice in patients with TNBC, Dias said.
This site is entirely volunteer. Please consider supporting this work through your donation.

Metabolic Syndrome and TNBC

Improving metabolic factors may help improve survival in postmenopausal women with triple-negative breast cancer, according to research presented at the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. These factors, which include weight gain, reduced activity and insulin resistance, can be an issue for women diagnosed with TNBC and may have serious repercussions for health overall. 
Researchers compared these factors, also called metabolic syndrome, with survival rates in women diagnosed with TNBC who participated in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), enrolled from 1993 to 1998. 
The average time from enrollment to TNBC diagnosis was 8.6 years; women with the most metabolic components had a significantly shorter time (7 years) to diagnosis than those without any metabolic syndrome components (9.8 years). Women with TNBC and 3 to 4 metabolic components had 10-year all-cause survival rates 35% lower than TNBC survivors with no metabolic syndrome components.
• 29% of the women (178 patients) had no metabolic syndrome components.
• 53% had 1 to 2 components (323 patients).
• 7% had 3 to 4 components (43 patients). 
• Those with the most metabolic syndrome components were often black. 
• Patients with income under $50,000 a year were more likely to have a greater number of metabolic components. 
The conclusion: Greater attention should be given to issues such as weight gain, physical activity, and insulin levels. 
This site is entirely volunteer. Please consider a small (or large would be fine) donation. You can donate here.