An international clinical trial of nilotnib, touted as a novel melanoma drug, is all set to start. The Rush University Medical Center has just enrolled the first U.S. patient, it has been announced.
An international clinical trial of nilotnib, touted as a novel melanoma drug, is all set to start. The Rush University Medical Center has just enrolled the first U.S. patient, it has been announced. Rather than blocking or killing all rapidly dividing cells, whether malignant or not, the drug is designed to sabotage aberrant molecules characteristic of individual cancers — in this case, the c-kit protein.
Nilotnib, marketed by Novartis under the brand name Tasigna, is an oral drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia but is now being tested for the first time for the treatment of melanomas that express the c-kit gene. As a small molecule, nilotnib is able to slip across the cell’s membrane and into the machinery inside. There it targets, and turns off, the abnormal c-kit protein, created by a mutated c-kit gene, shutting it down and thus disrupting the relay team of molecular signals the protein participates in that ultimately spur cell growth and cause melanoma lesions to proliferate.
Patients with melanomas expressing a mutated c-kit gene are eligible to participate in the study. These types of melanomas, which typically occur in mucosal tissue, the eye or the foot, are extremely aggressive. The aim of the trial is to determine whether nilotnib can block the growth and spread of this kind of melanoma and extend life.
Participants will receive either nilotnib or dacarbazine, a chemotherapy drug commonly used to treat advanced melanoma. Those in the latter group will be able to begin receiving nilotnib if their cancer progresses after dacarbzaine treatment.
Dr. Howard Kaufman, director of the Rush University Cancer Center and lead investigator of the study at Rush, said, “For advanced melanoma, there are currently few satisfactory treatments,” Kaufman said. “But new targeted therapies, including vaccines, antibodies and small molecules like nilotnib are in clinical trials now, adding to an arsenal of treatments that appear to be promising. This trial is especially significant since the c-kit mutation is found more commonly in melanoma arising from the mucosa and foot, which are historically very difficult types of melanoma to treat.”
The “targeted” therapy holds out hope of transforming cancer from a lethal disease into a chronic, but manageable disease, he added.
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