New Spherical Nucleic Acid ‘Drug’ Kills Tumor Cells in Humans With Glioblastoma

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Early clinical trial shows experimental drug crosses blood-brain barrier to trigger death of brain tumor cells

Lead investigator Priya Kumthekar, MD, associate professor of Neurology in the Division of Neuro-oncology.

An early clinical trial in individuals with the deadly brain cancer, glioblastoma, showed an experimental spherical nucleic acid (SNA) drug developed by Northwestern University scientists was able to penetrate the blood-brain barrier and trigger the death of tumor cells.

This study, published in Science Translational Medicine, is the first time a nanotherapeutic has been shown to cross the blood-brain barrier when given through intravenous infusion and alter the genetic machinery of a tumor to cause cell death. The drug crossed the blood-brain barrier, dialed down the level of a cancer-causing gene and promoted tumor cell death.

The results build upon previously published pre-clinical research by the Northwestern team.

“We showed the drug, NU-0129, even at very small doses, causes tumor cells to undergo what’s called apoptosis or programmed cell death,” said lead investigator Priya Kumthekar, MD, ’08 ’11 ’12 GME, associate professor in the Ken and Ruth Davee Department of Neurology Division of Neuro-oncology. “It’s a remarkable finding in humans that confirms what we had previously seen in our animal studies.”

Now Northwestern scientists plan to use this technology to advance this type of therapeutic for brain tumor care.

The phase 0 study was conducted with eight individuals who had recurrent glioblastoma at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. In phase 0, investigators use a small dose of medication to make sure it isn’t harmful to humans before they start using it in higher doses in larger clinical trials.

Study participants received the drug intravenously prior to surgery. Following tumor removal, Kumthekar and her team studied the tumors to determine how well the drug crossed the blood-brain barrier and its effect on the tumor cells.

Glioblastoma affects approximately 13,000 to 15,000 patients each year in the United States and is uniformly fatal. There have been no new drugs approved for glioblastoma in the past decade. Scientists said it’s been hard to develop a drug that can breach the protective blood-brain barrier and reach the highly aggressive brain tumor.

SNAs look like a Koosh ball

“This unique 3D design has the ability to infiltrate tumor cells to correct the genes inside and make them susceptible for therapy-induced killing,” said senior author Alexander Stegh, PhD, associate professor of Neurology in the Division of Neuro-oncology.

NU-0129 is the first SNA drug developed for systemic use. SNAs are structures consisting of DNA or RNA arranged around a nanoparticle, which looks like a “Koosh” ball, Stegh said.

Stegh developed the drug with Chad Mirkin, PhD, the discoverer and inventor of the SNA platform and the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry at the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and director of Northwestern’s International Institute for Nanotechnology.

The glioblastoma drug represents a revolutionary new class of drugs. The novel SNA platform on which it is based can be applied to other types of neurological diseases, such as Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s and Parkinson’s, by similarly turning down the genes that lead to those diseases.

Highly unusual drug route

It’s highly unusual for a drug to be developed in preclinical research at a university, shepherded through U.S. Food & Drug Administration approval as an investigational new drug and studied in a clinical trial — all within the same university and without funding from a pharmaceutical company. In most cases, a drug is developed and licensed to a pharmaceutical company.

“We want to move the technology forward as quickly as possible because there are patients with a disease with no current cure,” Kumthekar said.

Leon Platanias, MD, PhD, the Jesse, Sara, Andrew, Abigail, Benjamin and Elizabeth Lurie Professor of Oncology and director of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, said, “These exciting findings for the first time support the potential of spherical nucleic acids for drug delivery to brain tumors. They may prove to have important long-term translational implications for the treatment of these tumors.”

Kumthekar and Stegh are also members of the Lurie Cancer Center.

Other Northwestern authors include: Daniel Brat, MD, PhD, the chair and Magerstadt Professor of Pathology; Craig Horbinski, MD, PhD, director of Neuropathology in the Department of Pathology; Gayle Woloschak, PhD, associate dean for graduate student and postdoctoral affairs and professor of Radiation Oncology; C. David James, PhD, professor emeritus of Neurological Surgery; Caroline H. Ko, PhD; Tatjana Paunesku, PhD, research associate professor of Radiation Oncology; Karan Dixit, MD, assistant professor of Neurology in the Division of Neuro-oncology; Adam Sonabend, MD, assistant professor of Neurological Surgery; Orin Bloch, MD; Matthew Tate, MD, PhD, associate professor of Neurological Surgery; Margaret Schwartz; Laura Zuckerman; Ray Lezon; Rimas Lukas, MD, associate professor of Neurology in the Division of Neuro-oncology; Borko Jovanovic, PhD, associate professor of Preventive Medicine in the Division of Biostatistics; Kathleen McCortney, MS; Serena Tommasini-Ghelfi, PhD; Lisa Hurley; Dusten Unruh, PhD; Nitya Sharma, PhD; Manoj Kandpal, MTech, PhD, research assistant professor of Surgery in the Division of Organ Transplantation; Fotini Kouri, PhD, adjunct assistant professor of Neurology in the Division of Neuro-oncology; Ramana Davuluri, PhD, adjunct assistant professor of Preventive Medicine in the Division of Health and Biomedical Informatics; and Ann Adams, JD, lecturer in the Department of Preventive Medicine.

Stegh is shareholder of Exicure Inc., which develops SNA therapeutics. He and Caroline Ko are inventors on patent entitled “Nanoconjugates able to cross the blood-brain barrier.” Rimas Lukas serves on the speakers’ bureau for Novocure and has received honoraria for medical editing for EBSCO Publishing and Medlink Neurology, for creating and presenting CME board review material for American Physician Institute and Clinical Care Options, and for consulting from Abbvie, Eisai, NewLink Genetics and Reneuron. Lukas also has served on advisory boards for Monteris and Novocure. Margaret Schwartz has served on the advisory board and the speakers bureau for Novocure. Jeremy Heidel has been a paid consultant to Northwestern University for the NU-0129 project.

This research was supported by the Office of Research at Northwestern University, the Center for Cancer Nanotechnology Excellence Initiative of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) under award U54 CA151880 and 199091, the Northwestern brain tumor SPORE grant under the National Cancer Institute award P50CA221747, NIH grant S10OD020118, NIH ARRA grant SP0007167 and Department of Energy contract DE-AC02-06CH11357.