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Australian scientists have revealed a better way to identify which patients should respond to powerful PARP inhibitors (PARPi), resolving an important question in ovarian cancer care about why some patients respond to these drugs, while others do not.

  
Olga Kondrashova, Ph... - Click to enlarge in new windowOlga Kondrashova, PhD; Clare Scott, MB, BS, PhD. A CLOSER LOOK: New ovarian cancer research reveals how to better match patients with the right treatment. Olga Kondrashova, PhD, (left) and Clare Scott, MB, BS, PhD, led the research.

The findings add to a vital "checklist" that helps match ovarian cancer patients with the right therapy for their cancer. Being able to offer targeted treatment is crucial for patient survival rates which have seen little improvement over the past 30 years.

 

The study, published in Nature Communications (2018;9:3970), was led by Clare Scott, MB, BS, PhD; Olga Kondrashova, PhD; Matthew Wakefield, PhD; and Monique Topp, PhD, from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute; in collaboration with Alexander Dobrovic, PhD, Associate Professor from the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute and LaTrobe University School of Medicine.

 

Scott said it was well-documented that PARPi could only work when the cancer's DNA repair process wasn't functioning as it should.

 

"For the past 2 decades, it was thought that ovarian cancer patients whose cancer's BRCA1 genes are 'silenced'-or methylated-have faulty DNA repair and therefore were good candidates for PARPi treatment.

 

"Yet the puzzling thing was we were unable to predict the patients for which the drugs would work," she noted.

 

Kondrashova said the "Eureka moment" came when the researchers discovered subtle differences in some BRCA1 methylated cancers. These subtle yet significant epigenetic differences explained why some patients would respond to the drug, while others would not.

 

"It was suddenly clear that all patients in the group could not be treated the same way," she noted. "We discovered that some of the patients had what could be described as 'incomplete' BRCA1 methylation where not every gene copy was 'switched off.'

 

"As it turns out, incomplete methylation isn't enough to cause faulty DNA repair in cancer cells which explains why PARPi isn't going to be effective for these patients," Kondrashova continued.

 

"At the same time, those in the group who had 'complete' BRCA1 methylation in their cancer were responsive to PARPi confirming to us that the treatment should not be discounted."

 

Scott said the findings were a result of quality datasets and sophisticated laboratory models called patient derived xenografts (PDX models).

 

"PDX models are powerful because they mimic the complexity of human tumors at key stages as the cancer progresses.

 

"Our models are developed with cancerous tissue donated by patients from the Royal Women's Hospital, the Royal Melbourne Hospital, and the Peter Mac at the time of their cancer diagnosis, or prior to and after treatment with PARPi," she noted.

 

"Like snapshots in time, PDX models allow us to accurately track how each patient's cancer is changing or responding to treatment," according to Scott. "The success of this approach shows that a long-term, detailed analysis is invaluable for providing better patient care."

 

Scott said understanding the various reasons for PARPi resistance was vital for developing better, more personalized patient care.

 

"There is no one-size-fits-all approach for ovarian cancer care. We need to keep making these strides in understanding so we can better match patients with the right treatment for their cancer," Scott concluded.