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First-in-human testing of new cancer drug reported

Date:
September 26, 2017
Source:
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center
Summary:
The first clinical trials of a new drug that targets solid cancer tumors has now been tested. The Phase 1A clinical trials mark the first time ever the drug, called BXQ-350, was used in people. BXQ-350 is comprised of a human protein called SapC and a human lipid called DOPS.
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The University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center played a key role in the first clinical trials of a new drug that targets solid cancer tumors. The Phase 1A clinical trials mark the first time ever the drug was used in people. It opened at several sites across the country. Olivier Rixe, MD, PhD, at UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center, oversaw the clinical trials' national protocol development and directed the trial in New Mexico.

The drug, called BXQ-350, has been shown in pre-clinical studies to induce cancer cells to die but have little effect on normal cells. It is produced by Bexion Pharmaceuticals, a privately held biotech company, that focuses on cures for cancer. BXQ-350 is comprised of a human protein called SapC and a human lipid called DOPS.

Clinical researchers for the Phase 1A clinical trial tested the safety of BXQ-350. "It had a very good safety profile," says Rixe. Rixe hopes the drug will continue to show promise for those whose brain cancer has recurred. He is especially hopeful for those diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme, a particularly aggressive brain cancer.

New cancer drugs and treatments go through a series of steps before the United States Food and Drug Administration approves them for use in people. The entire process can take a decade or more and cost billions of dollars. The early phases test whether the new drug or treatment is safe, what its side effects are, and what the best dose for treatment is. Later phases test whether the new drug or treatment works better than the standard therapy. All clinical trials in the United States must meet stringent safety measures that the FDA enforces.

Terry Novak, RN, served as the Nurse Clinical Trials Coordinator for the BXQ-350 clinical trial at UNM Cancer Center. "It was an honor for me to be part of this trial," she says. "The drug was very well tolerated with minimal side effects."

The earliest clinical trials are called Phase 1A clinical trials. Clinical researchers make sure that the people who join a Phase 1A clinical trial follow the trial's set of rules, called a protocol. The FDA approves the clinical trial's protocol before it can begin. The protocol lists the details of how the drug or treatment will be given and what data will be collected. Importantly, it also describes the conditions under which researchers will shut the clinical trial down.

Phase 1 clinical trials test how safe a drug is for people and how it moves through people's bodies. Extensive preclinical trials, which researchers conduct on animals, suggest a starting range for safe doses in people. Phase 1 clinical trials start at the lowest dose at which clinical researchers expect to see an effect. The protocols call for gradual dose increases while watching the people on the trial very carefully.

Clinical researchers may shut down a clinical trial at any time if the people in it have severe side effects. Phase 1 clinical trials do not use a placebo; everyone on the trial knows they are getting the new drug. "Patients on this trial are truly our heroes," Novak says about the people on the BXQ-350 trial. Novak helped them meet the clinical trial's protocol. She says, "Their courage and confidence in the UNM Cancer Center and in Dr. Rixe made this trial possible."

Rixe originated the Phase 1 protocol and oversaw the protocol development for all of the sites at which the Phase 1A BXQ-350 clinical trials took place, in addition to directing the Phase 1A clinical trial at UNM Cancer Center. He was also involved in developing the drug through preclinical trials, to its Investigational New Drug application.

Rixe and his Phase 1 clinical trials team at UNM Cancer Center have completed 12 Phase 1 clinical trials in New Mexico. "We offer what other cancer centers, like Harvard and MD Anderson, offer their patients," Rixe says. "The patients treated at UNM Cancer Center are among the first in the world to be given this drug."


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Materials provided by University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Cite This Page:

University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center. "First-in-human testing of new cancer drug reported." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 26 September 2017. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/09/170926091552.htm>.
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center. (2017, September 26). First-in-human testing of new cancer drug reported. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 22, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/09/170926091552.htm
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center. "First-in-human testing of new cancer drug reported." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/09/170926091552.htm (accessed April 22, 2024).

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