Advance in photodynamic therapy offers new approach to ovarian cancer

In In The News by Barbara Jacoby

By: David Stauth

From: oregonstate.edu

Researchers at Oregon State University have made a significant advance in the use of photodynamic therapy to combat ovarian cancer in laboratory animals, using a combination of techniques that achieved complete cancer cell elimination with no regrowth of tumors.

The findings were just published in the journal Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine, and after further research may offer a novel mechanism to address this aggressive and often fatal cancer that kills 14,000 women in the United States each year.

Ovarian cancer has a high mortality rate because it often has metastasized into the abdominal cavity before it’s discovered. Toxicity and cancer-cell resistance can also compromise the effectiveness of radiation and chemotherapy that’s often used as a follow-up to surgery.

The new approach being developed by researchers from the OSU College of Pharmacy and the University of Nebraska takes existing approaches to photodynamic therapy and makes them significantly more effective by adding compounds that make cancer cells vulnerable to reactive oxygen species, and also reducing the natural defenses of those cells.

“Surgery and chemotherapy are the traditional approaches to ovarian cancer, but it’s very difficult to identify all of the places where a tumor has spread, and in some cases almost impossible to remove all of them,” said Oleh Taratula, an assistant professor in the Oregon State University/Oregon Health & Science University College of Pharmacy.

“Photodynamic therapy is a different approach that can be used as an adjunct to surgery right during the operation, and appears to be very safe and nontoxic,” Taratula said. “In the past its effectiveness has been limited, but our new findings may make this technology far more effective than it’s ever been before.”

Using the new approach, a patient is first given a photosensitizing compound called phthalocyanine, which produces reactive oxygen species that can kill cells when they are exposed to near-infrared light. In addition, a gene therapy is administered that lowers the cellular defense against reactive oxygen species.

Both the phthalocyanine and genetic therapy, composed of “small, interfering RNA,” are attached to what researchers call “dendrimer-based nanoplatforms,” a nanotechnology approach developed by OSU researchers. It delivers the compounds selectively into cancer cells, but not healthy cells.

Compared to existing photodynamic therapies, this approach allows the near-infrared light to penetrate much deeper into abdominal tissues, and dramatically increases the effectiveness of the procedure in killing cancer cells.

Using photodynamic therapy alone, some tumors in laboratory animals began to regrow after two weeks. But with the addition of the combinatorial genetic therapy to weaken the cancer cell defenses, there was no evidence of cancer recurrence. During the procedures, mice receiving the gene therapy also continued to grow and gain weight, indicating a lack of side effects.

“Cancer cells are very smart,” Taratula said. “They overexpress certain proteins, including one called DJ1, that help them survive attack by reactive oxygen species that otherwise might kill them. We believe a key to the success of this therapy is that it takes away those defensive mechanisms.”

The overexpression of DJ1, researchers said in their study, is associated with invasion, metastasis, resistance to cancer therapies, and overall cancer cell survival. That excess of DJ1 is silenced by the genetic therapy composed of siRNA.

The findings of this research, Taratula said, could also build upon some other recent advances in photodynamic therapy, in which a different compound called naphthalocyanine could be administered prior to surgery, causing the cancer cells to “glow” and fluoresce when exposed to near-infrared light. This provides a literal road map for surgeons to follow, showing which tissue is cancerous and which is not.

There’s no reason that approach couldn’t be combined with the newest advance, Taratula said, providing multiple mechanisms to improve surgical success and, with minimal side effects, help eradicate any remaining cancer cells that were not completely removed.

“Our study established a prospective therapeutic approach against ovarian cancer,” the researchers wrote in their conclusion. “The tumors exposed to a single dose of a combinatorial therapy were completely eradicated from the mice.”

The studies were supported by the Medical Research Foundation of Oregon and the College of Pharmacy at OSU. Continued research will take place with treatment of malignant tumors on live dogs in the OSU College of Veterinary Medicine, prior to any human clinical tests.