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Biotech / Medical : Agouron Pharmaceuticals (AGPH) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Michael L. who wrote (5206)8/21/1998 9:59:00 PM
From: mike head  Respond to of 6136
 
Not exactly new- but interesting! FWIW,
Novel Therapy To Treat Lung Cancer
Patients Enrolling Patients At UCSF
Cancer Center

Researchers at the UCSF Cancer Center are recruiting patients with
advanced lung cancer for a clinical trial of a novel drug that they hope will
inhibit the growth and spread of cancer.

The drug, developed by Agouron Pharmaceuticals, Inc., is one of the first
agents in a new class of therapies that have been shown to inhibit the actions
of a natural body chemical, called Matrix Metalloproteases (MMPs), that
breaks down the material between cells to make room for new cellular
growth.

There is good reason for enthusiasm about this drug because the preliminary
data looks favorable and suggests that MMPs inhibitors (MMPIs) are
effective in slowing tumor growth, said David Jablons, MD, UCSF assistant
professor of surgery and principal investigator of the study.

The inhibitors are also well tolerated because they are taken in pill form and
have minimal side effects. In a normal, healthy body, MMPs play an important
role in such processes as fetal development, ovulation, wound healing, and cell
growth and regeneration.

However, when too many MMPs are produced or are present at the wrong
time, they can break down the material, known as extracellular matrix, that
holds cells together inside tissues.

This activity occurs in diseases in which healthy tissue is broken down or
unhealthy tissue grows, as in cancer and rheumatoid arthritis, Jablons said.

Cancer tumors grow and spread, interfering with the functions of healthy
tissue. Some MMPs have been shown to play a significant role in tumor
development by contributing to three processes that lead to the progression of
cancer: invasion, metastasis, and angiogenesis.

Cancer researchers believe that a MMPI, called AG3340, will block these
processes while limiting the damage that may result from a broad suppression
of MMPs.

Invasion is the expansion of tumors into neighboring healthy tissue. MMPs act
to break down the matrix structure of the healthy tissue, paving the way for the
invading malignant tumor.

Metastasis is the spread of tumor cells to distant locations in the body. MMPs
loosen the tissue structures, permitting cancer cells to break off and spread to
other locations where they can grow. In addition, the breakdown of tissues
themselves trigger the release of more MMPs, which promotes further tumor
growth and expansion.

Angiogenesis is the development of new blood vessels. As a malignant tumor
grows, it requires the development of blood vessels to supply its nutrients and
oxygen. MMPs help these new vessels to grow by breaking down the matrix
to pave the way for advancing blood vessels.

During the clinical trial of the MMPI, participating patients will be randomized
to receive either a pill form of the drug or placebo in combination with
chemotherapy infusions. This is a multicenter, phase III study, the stage of a
trial designed to determine the drug1s effectiveness.

To quality for the trial at UCSF/Mount Zion, part of UCSF Stanford Health
Care, patients must have advanced non-small cell lung cancer, a recurrence of
the disease following surgery or radiation therapy, and have had no previous
chemotherapy treatments.