| Literature DB >> 30082399 |
Ganesh M Shankar1, Ameya R Kirtane2,3, Julie J Miller4, Hormoz Mazdiyasni2,3, Jaimie Rogner2,3, Tammy Tai2,3, Erik A Williams5, Fumi Higuchi1, Tareq A Juratli1, Kensuke Tateishi6, Mara V A Koerner1, Shilpa S Tummala1, Alexandria L Fink1, Tristan Penson1, Stephen P Schmidt7, Gregory R Wojtkiewicz7, Aymen Baig5, Joshua M Francis8,9, Mikael L Rinne8,9, Julie M Batten5, Tracy T Batchelor4, Priscilla K Brastianos4, William T Curry1, Fred G Barker1, Justin T Jordan4, A John Iafrate5, Andrew S Chi10, Jochen K Lennerz5, Matthew Meyerson8,9, Robert Langer11,3, Hiroaki Wakimoto1, Giovanni Traverso11,3,12, Daniel P Cahill13.
Abstract
Aggressive neurosurgical resection to achieve sustained local control is essential for prolonging survival in patients with lower-grade glioma. However, progression in many of these patients is characterized by local regrowth. Most lower-grade gliomas harbor isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) or IDH2 mutations, which sensitize to metabolism-altering agents. To improve local control of IDH mutant gliomas while avoiding systemic toxicity associated with metabolic therapies, we developed a precision intraoperative treatment that couples a rapid multiplexed genotyping tool with a sustained release microparticle (MP) drug delivery system containing an IDH-directed nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) inhibitor (GMX-1778). We validated our genetic diagnostic tool on clinically annotated tumor specimens. GMX-1778 MPs showed mutant IDH genotype-specific toxicity in vitro and in vivo, inducing regression of orthotopic IDH mutant glioma murine models. Our strategy enables immediate intraoperative genotyping and local application of a genotype-specific treatment in surgical scenarios where local tumor control is paramount and systemic toxicity is therapeutically limiting.Entities:
Keywords: glioma; intraoperative diagnostics; local therapy; metabolic therapeutics
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30082399 PMCID: PMC6130372 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1805751115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779