Therapies that target the molecular profile of non-small-cell lung cancer with the mutated cancer-causing protein KRas have been found to be the most effective treatment strategy.
Therapies that target the molecular profile of non-small-cell lung cancer with the mutated cancer-causing protein KRas have been found to be the most effective treatment strategy for patients with the condition, researchers at University of Cincinnati (UC) Cancer Institute revealed. These findings are being presented via poster at the American Association for Cancer Research– International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer Joint Conference on the Molecular Origins of Lung Cancer, Jan. 6-9, 2014, in San Diego.
Non-small-cell lung cancer is any type of lung cancer other than small-cell lung cancer—the most common type of lung cancer. Non-small-cell lung cancer with KRas mutation is non-druggable, and no successful targeted therapy currently exists to help patients with this form of lung cancer.
Nagla Karim, MD, PhD, a member of the institute, assistant professor in the division of hematology oncology at the UC College of Medicine, UC Health physician and principal investigator on this study, says researchers assessed the molecular profiling and sensitivity to the KRas mutant lung cancer in comparison with the wild type, or non-mutant, lung cancer.
"Recent studies suggest that patients with KRas-mutant non-small-cell lung cancer do not often benefit from standard systemic therapies and do not respond to epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors, which are used to control the progression of cancer," she says.
"There is a need for therapies specifically developed for these patients, and molecular profiling has the potential to identify possible targets that might provide better treatment and innovative targeted therapy for KRas-mutated non-small-cell lung cancer."
The mutation of a KRas gene is an essential step in the development of many cancers, including non-small-cell lung cancer.
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"We assessed the expression of four genes involved in cell synthesis and repair, and our results show that in mutant-type KRas tumors, the levels of expression of several of three of the genes (BRCA1, TS and SRC) were significantly increased in comparison to normal lung tissue," Karim says. "The expression of the same genes was significantly increased in wild-type KRas tumors relative to their expression in normal lung.
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She adds that this data also suggests that the combination of an approved SRC inhibitor with a TS inhibitor might improve the outcome of patients with wild-type KRas tumors.
"These results shed new light on potentially more effective treatment strategies for patients with various types of KRas-related non-small-cell lung cancer," she says. "We hope that these findings will lead to better therapies and improved outcomes for patients."
Source-Eurekalert