News Release

New drug shrinks cancer in animals, U-M study shows

Small-molecule MDM2 inhibitors developed at U-M show promise in multiple cancer types

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A study led by researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center showed in animal studies that new cancer drug compounds they developed shrank tumors, with few side effects.

The study, done in two mouse models of human cancer, looked at two compounds designed to activate a protein that kills cancer cells. The protein, p53, is inactivated in a significant number of human cancers. In some cases, it is because another protein, MDM2, binds to p53 and blocks its tumor suppressor function. This allows the tumor to grow unchecked. The new compounds block MDM2 from binding to p53, consequently activating p53.

"For the first time, we showed that activation of p53 by our highly potent and optimized MDM2 inhibitors can achieve complete tumor regression in a mouse model of human cancer," says lead study author Shaomeng Wang, Ph.D., Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis Professor in Medicine and director of the Cancer Drug Discovery Program at the U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Wang presented the study at the American Association for Cancer Research 102nd annual meeting.

Many traditional cancer drugs also activate p53 but they do so by causing DNA damage in both tumor cells and normal cells, causing side effects. These new MDM2 inhibitors activate p53 while avoiding the DNA damage common with other drugs. In this study, which was done in collaboration with Ascenta Therapeutics and sanonfi-aventis, researchers showed that these new drugs shrank tumors without significant side effects.

Because p53 is involved in all types of human cancer, the new drug has potential to be used in multiple types of cancer. Further, the researchers also identified certain markers in tumors that predict which ones will be particularly sensitive to the MDM2 inhibitor, which would allow physicians to target the drug only to patients most likely to benefit.

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Additional authors: Wei Sun, Shanghai Yu, Yu-jun Zhao, Sanjeev Kumar, Donna McEachern, Liu Liu, Denzil Bernard, Duxin Sun, Peng Zou, Xiaqin Li, Han Yi, Jeanne Stuckey, Jianting Long and Sami Malek, all from U-M; Dajun Yang, Sanmao Kang, Ming Guo, Brian Wood, Lance Leopold and Mel Sorensen from Ascenta Therapeutics; Cedric Barriere, Isabelle Meaux, Odette Dos-Santos, Jean-Christophe Carry, Pierre-Yves Abecassis, Anne Charlier, Vincent Ferey, Carlos Garcia-Echeverria, Christophe Lengauer and Laurent Debussche from sanofi-aventis

Funding: National Cancer Institute, Ascenta Therapeutics and sanofi-aventis.

Disclosure: Shaomeng Wang owns stock and stock options in Ascenta and serves as a consultant for Ascenta. These new MDM2 inhibitors have been licensed to Ascenta Therapeutics, then sublicensed to sanofi-aventis for clinical development, and the University of Michigan receives milestone payments and royalties.

Reference: American Association for Cancer Research 102nd Annual Meeting, April 2-6, 2011, Orlando, Fla., Abstract No. LB-204 -- Highly potent and optimized small-molecule inhibitors of MDM2 achieve complete tumor regression in animal models of solid tumors and leukemia

Resources:
U-M Cancer AnswerLine, 800-865-1125
U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center, www.mcancer.org
Clinical trials at U-M, www.UMClinicalStudies.org


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