News Release

Discovered a potential treatment option for children with Ewing's sarcoma

Researchers have tested in mice a combination of 2 active ingredients that achieves complete remission of the disease in all cases

Peer-Reviewed Publication

IDIBELL-Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute

Ewing's Sarcoma Researchers

image: This is the Spanish consortium on Ewing's sarcoma research. view more 

Credit: IBIS

A research consortium made up of the Virgen del Rocio hospital in Seville, Sant Joan de Deu and the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) in Barcelona, has found a new therapeutic alternative for children who suffer from a malignant pediatric tumor bone and soft tissue called Ewing's sarcoma.

Researchers have combined two active ingredients (Olaparib and Trabectedin), and in animal models have shown that improves the sensitivity of cancer cells to these drugs, which seems to increase its effect. In fact, they have been observed complete remission of cancer in 100% of cases for a very long time. The study results are published in the journal Oncotarget.

Ewing's sarcoma is the second most common bone cancer and affects children and youth. Currently, if diagnosed early and there is no metastasis it can be cured in 80% of cases but between 25% and 30% of cases are diagnosed when it has metastasized and survival drops to 20%.

"Our results demonstrate that the combination of trabectedin and Olaparib could be a new therapeutic strategy that should be studied in greater depth so that it can benefit patients with this disease in the near future," said Enrique de Alava, director of the Unit Management Clinical Pathology Virgen del Rocio Hospital in Seville and Molecular Pathology group at IBIS.

Efficient combination

It has been observed as Ewing's sarcoma cells need to keep repairing mechanisms of DNA damage in good condition to survive and continue to divide. "Trabectedin, however, causes breaks and abnormal DNA structure of the cancer cell, which induces cell death. And Olaparib works on the same line, blocking the action of a gene (PARP1), whose function is to repair DNA damage when it detects lesions "explained the head of the group IDIBELL Sarcomas, Oscar Martínez Tirado

The combination of both drugs is synergistic and can eliminate the DNA repair system full, obtaining a much more powerful than that achieved with the application of each drug individually antitumor effect.

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The Spanish Association Against Cancer (AECC) and the Carlos III Institute of Health have funded this initiative of doctors Alava, Jaume Mora, director of the research group of molecular biology of tumor development Hospital Sant Joan de Deu de Barcelona and Oscar Martinez Tirado, director of IDIBELL group of sarcomas.

Article reference

Ordóñez JL, Amaral AT, Carcaboso AM, Herrero-Martín D, Del Carmen García-Macías M, Sevillano V, Alonso D, Pascual-Pasto G, San-Segundo L, Vila-Ubach M, Rodrigues T, Fraile S, Teodosio C, Mayo-Iscar A, Aracil M, Galmarini CM, Tirado OM, Mora J, de Álava E. The PARP inhibitor olaparib enhances the sensitivity of ewing sarcoma to trabectedin. Oncotarget. 2015 [Epub ahead of print]


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