Title: Tumor therapy
1Tumor therapy
2What is cancer ?
Cancer is a collection of diseases with the
common feature of uncontrolled growth.
3Cancer features
- Uncontrolled growth is their core property
- They are life-threatening
- The definition of cancer is invalid.
4History
- Cancer has been known in human societies from the
ancient Egyptians. - Cancer is not confined to human and the higher
mammals but affects almost all multicellular
organisms. - About 140 years ago a German microscopist,
Johannes Mueller, showed that cancers were made
up of cells.
5Influence of age on cancer incidence (USA).
6Oncogenes
- Definition
- oncogenes are genes that gain oncogenic or
transforming potential as a result of genetic
changes in either their coding region or
regulatory sequences. - Proto-oncogene is oncogene present in normal
cells to distinguish it from the altered gene in
the cancer cell. - c-src v.s. v-src (The first identification in
Rous sarcoma virus)
7Repressor genes
- Certain repressor genes are inactivated by loss
of both alleles of a gene, eg. Rb. - Biological changes of some repressor genes result
from inactivation of only one allele, eg. P53.
8Carcinogen Definition
- A carcinogen is a substance that causes cancer
(or is believed to cause cancer).
9- Chemical carcinogens
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
- Aromatic amines
- Nitrosamines
- Alkiating agents
- Oxidation
- Superoxide radical
- H2O2
- Hydroxyl radical
- Radiation carcinogens
- X-ray
- UV
10- Base excision repair
- Nucleotide excision repair
- Mismatch repair
- Homologous recombination
- DNA end-joining
11Rebuilding the road to cancer
Genetic events required to convert a normal human
cell into a tumor cell were elucidated. (1).
Immortalize cells by recovering telomerase
activity. (2). Inhibit both the p53 and
retinoblastoma (pRb) pathways. (3). Activate
oncogenes to allow cell growth in the absence
of growth factors.
(Weitzman and Yaniv, Nature 400 401-402, 1999
Hahn et al., Nature 400 464-468, 1999).
12Diagnostic Imaging
- X-ray
- CT Scans
- Ultrasound
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
13X-rays
- X-rays are the most common type of imaging. The
images produced by X-rays are due to the
different absorption rates of radiation from
tissues. Calcium in bones absorbs X-rays the
most, so bones look white on an X-ray film, also
known as a radiograph. - Muscle and other soft tissues absorb less
radiation, and have more gray tones on the
radiograph. Air absorbs the least, so lungs look
black on a radiograph.
14CT Scans
- A computed tomography scan (also called a CT scan
or a CAT scan) also uses X-rays to create images
of the body. However a radiograph and a CT scan
show different types of information. - The data from a CT scan can then be
computer-enhanced to be more sensitive. With both
plain radiographs and CT scans the patient can be
given a contrast agent in a drink and/or by
injection to more clearly show the boundaries
between organs or between organs and tumors.
15Ultrasound
- Ultrasound uses sound waves that are at a higher
frequency than sound that is heard by the human
ear. A transducer gives off the sound waves. The
sound waves are then reflected back to the
transducer by organs and tissues in the body.
The reflected sound waves are then used to draw a
picture on a computer screen showing what is
inside the body. Ultrasound can be used to look
for certain types of tumors, and can also be used
to guide doctors during biopsies or treating
tumors with radiation therapy.
16Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) uses radio
frequency waves in the presence of a strong
magnetic field produced by an MRI machine to
cause cells to emit a radio frequency. Different
tissues (including tumors) emit different signal
intensities based on their chemical structure.
Using these signals, a picture of what is inside
the body can be created and shown on a computer
screen. Much like CT scans, MRI can produce
three-dimensional images of sections of the body,
but MRI is sometimes more sensitive than CT
scans.
17Surgery
- Surgery is the most effective form of treatment
for cancer, and yet the most aggressive. Surgery
offers the greatest chance for cure for many
types of cancer, especially those that have not
yet spread to other parts of the body. - Advances in surgical techniques today allow
surgeons to successfully operate on a growing
number of patients, and to do so with smaller and
smaller incisions. - In many cases, additional therapies such as
radiation or chemotherapy closely follow or
occasionally come before cancer surgery.
18Chemotherapy
- Chemotherapy is the treatment of disease with
drugs that interfere with cancer cells growth
and reproduction. These drugs may affect the
cancer cells in different ways and can be given
in a combination of several drugs together or as
a single drug. Chemotherapy can also be used
during radiation therapy. Depending on the type
of cancer and how advanced it is, the goal of
chemotherapy can be to cure the cancer, to
control its spread or to relieve symptoms of the
cancer. - Chemotherapy can be given in a variety of
different ways, depending upon the drug that is
prescribed by your doctor. Most commonly,
chemotherapy is given intravenously (through a
vein), orally (by mouth), by injection (a shot)
or topically (applied to the skin). Because some
drugs work better together than alone, often two
or more drugs are given at the same time. This is
called combination therapy.
19Radiation Oncology
- Treating with Radiation
- The primary purpose of radiation therapy is to
eliminate or shrink localized cancers. The aim is
to kill as many cancer cells as possible, while
damaging minimal healthy tissues. In some cases,
the purpose is to kill all cancer cells curing a
patient. In other cases, when cures are not
possible, the purpose is to alleviate symptoms by
reducing the size of tumors causing the symptoms. -
- For certain types of cancer, radiation therapy
alone is the preferred treatment. Other times
radiation is used in conjunction with surgery,
chemotherapy, or both, and survival rates for
combination therapy in these cases are greater
than for any single type of therapy. Radiation
therapy is also useful for organ and function
preservation, such as laryngeal, breast, bladder
and limb cancers. - Radiation therapy can then be used to treat the
cancer and control the disease with low morbidity.
20- Tumor cell proliferation
- Angiogenesis
- Metastasis
- Immunosuppression
- Drug resistance (anti-apoptosis)
21Tumor cell proliferation
22- Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is widely
expressed in a number of solid tumors including
colorectal cancers. Overexpression of this
receptor is one means by which a cell can achieve
positive signals for survival and proliferation
another effective means is by constitutive
activation of EGFR.
23- Anti-EGFR antibody cetuximab
- EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor erlotinib
- CI-1033, a small molecule antagonist of EGFR
24- Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a
one of the most essential pro-angiogenic growth
factors expressed by most cancer-cell types and
certain tumor stromal cells. - Blocking the action of VEGF appears to be a
promising anti-angiogenic approach to treat
multiple types of solid tumors including breast
cancer, and clinical trials using agents which
target VEGF were launched beginning in the late
1990s.
25- Anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody bevacizumab
(Avastin) - Anti-VEGFR-1 human neutralizing antibody,
IMC-18F1 - ZD6474 is a VEGF flk-1/KDR receptor (VEGFR-2)
tyrosine kinase inhibitor
26Host effect cells against tumor cell
T-Cell
B-Cell
NK-Cell
Tc
Ab
MHC/TAA
ADCC
No MHC
27- Down-regulate the expression of MHC
- Polarization of immunity
- Inactivate NK cell activity
- Inactivate the activity of T cell by Tr
- Inactivate the immunity by TGF-beta secretion
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29- Dendritic cell fusion with tumor cell
- IL-12 gene therapy
- Tumor vaccine
30- Anti-metastasis drug?
- Anti-Anti-apoptosis drug?
31 32Thank You
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