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New targeted therapy shows
promise in children with metastatic Gastrointenstinal Stromal Tumor(GIST)
ATLANTA–Children with a rare digestive-tract
cancer that is resistant to front-line
therapy have benefited from a newer targeted
therapy that has been shown effective in
adults, according to data from a small
pilot study that Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
researchers will present at the American
Society of Clinical Oncology's annual meeting
in Atlanta on Sunday, June 4, at 9 a.m.
(Building C, Level 3, Room C306).
Investigators led by Katherine Janeway,
MD, and George Demetri, MD, of the Ludwig
Center for Cancer Research at Dana-Farber
will discuss results of a preliminary clinical
trial in which three children – two
teenagers and a pre-teen – with metastatic
Gastrointenstinal Stromal Tumor (GIST)
resistant to imatinib (Gleevec?) were treated
with sunitinib (Sutent?).
Sutent was recently approved by the FDA
for use in GIST patients as a multi-targeted "smart
drug" that inhibits several growth-stimulating
kinase enzymes in cancer cells. With sunitinib
therapy, the GIST lesions stabilized or
decreased in size in all three pediatric
patients, with one patient experiencing
a complete remission of two cancerous lung
nodules. Positron emission tomography (PET)
scanning, a sophisticated imaging technique,
in two patients showed significant decreases
in tumor-related activity at all sites
where the disease was present. Side effects
of sunitinib were manageable in all three
patients.
GIST most often occurs in people over
the age of 40 and can arise anywhere in
the gastrointestinal tract. Studies have
estimated that there are at least 5,000
new cases a year in the United States.
Very rare in children, GIST was found to
account for less than 5 percent of all
cases of the disease at one major cancer
center.
In most young people with GIST, the cancer
cells do not have detectable mutations
in the genes for the KIT and PDGFR-a, kinases,
although these signaling proteins are uncontrollably
activated. Adults with GIST whose tumors
lack mutations in these genes generally
do not benefit from imatinib therapy, but
show significant improvement with sunitinib
treatment. These findings led researchers
to test sunitinib in pediatric GIST patients.
"The results of this initial trial
confirm our prior observations that sunitinib
is an effective therapy for GIST cells
without kinase mutations, and it is particularly
important for these pediatric patients
with imatinib-resistant GIST," says
Demetri, the study's senior author and
an associate professor of medicine at Harvard
Medical School. "Follow-up with expanded
studies of sunitinib in children with GIST
and other pediatric cancers is definitely
warranted."
Funding for the study was provided in
part by the Ludwig Center at Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute and Pfizer, Inc.
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (www.danafarber.org)
is a principal teaching affiliate of the
Harvard Medical School and is among the
leading cancer research and care centers
in the United States. It is a founding
member of the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer
Center (DF/HCC), designated a comprehensive
cancer center by the National Cancer Institute.
The Ludwig Center for Cancer Research at
Dana-Farber is a new academic unit dedicated
to the discovery and development of molecularly-targeted
diagnostic and therapeutic tools for cancer. |