AI Article Synopsis

  • Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a serious type of lung cancer that is really tough to treat, with a low survival rate of under 7%.
  • A new combination of two drugs, ONC201 and lurbinectedin, has shown promise in effectively killing SCLC cells in tests.
  • The combination therapy worked especially well for one specific cell line and caused less harm to healthy lung cells, making it a potential new treatment option.

Article Abstract

The American Cancer Society estimates that ~15% of all lung cancers are categorized as small cell lung cancer (SCLC) with an overall five-year survival rate of less than 7%. Due to disease aggressiveness, more other malignancies, the standard of care is based on clinical efficacy rather than helpful biomarkers. Lurbinectedin is a small molecule RNA polymerase II inhibitor that binds the minor groove of DNA to induce double-strand breaks. Lurbinectedin has efficacy towards SCLC cells at sub-nM concentration and received accelerated FDA approval in 2020 for metastatic SCLC that progressed on platinum-based therapy. ONC201/TIC10 is a TRAIL pathway-inducing compound that with demonstrated clinical efficacy in H3K27M-mutated diffuse midline glioma and neuroendocrine tumors, in early phase clinical trials. We hypothesized that combining ONC201 and lurbinectedin may yield synergistic and targeted killing of SCLC cells. SCLC cell lines H1048, H1105, H1882, and H1417 were treated with ONC201 and lurbinectedin and cell viability was determined using a CellTiter-Glo assay using varying drug concentrations. Synergistic growth inhibition of SCLC cells was noted with combination of ONC201 and lurbinectedin. Induction of the integrated stress response mediator ATF4 and CHOP was observed with ONC201 and lurbinectedin along with induction of PARP cleavage indicative of apoptosis in response to cellular stress. Additionally, SCLC lines treated with the combination therapy displayed increased DNA breakage-related proteins such as phosphorylated Chk-1, Wee1 and γ-H2AX. Combination index revealed the most potent synergy occurred at the concentrations of 0.16 μM ONC201 and 0.05 nM lurbinectedin in the H1048 cell line, demonstrating highly efficient and selective killing of these tumor cells . While these therapies showed potency against the cell lines derived from SCLC patients, it is noteworthy that the combination showed significantly less toxicity to healthy human lung epithelial cells. Future studies could explore the combination of ONC201 and lurbinectedin in SCLC cell lines, SCLC patient-derived organoids, other tumor types, including in vivo studies and clinical translation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8900004PMC

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