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Drug Discovery and Development
The ultimate goal of our research is to understand the response of cancer to therapy using measurements of DNA synthetic pathways as imaged by positron emission tomography (PET). Ongoing studies have refined the techniques needed to obtain PET images with radiolabeled thymidine analogs, which are trapped in the DNA synthetic pathway. Studies that began in tissue culture and mice have now progressed to clinical trials. We have addressed a number of the problems associated with interpreting the PET images including the contributions to thymidine metabolism of intracellular pools, reutilization, and degradation. The most promising compound we have used to date is 18F-FLT (3'-deoxy-3'- fluorothymidine), which is an antiviral compound like AZT. It is trapped intracellularly after phosphorylation by thymidine kinase (TK) in a manner similar to the trapping of glucose analogs (FDG) after phosphorylation by hexokinase. This compound is stable to degradation and undergoes little metabolism, aside from glucuronidation. Studies in dogs and patients indicate that it readily visualizes proliferating organs such as the bone marrow, as well as tumors. Another analog, 18F-FMAU {1-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl)-thymine} is being studied in cell culture, animals and humans. Our in human studies found that FMAU was readily retained in tumors, but not in normally proliferating bone marrow. FMAU is retained by the action of thymidine kinase 2 (TK2), a mitochondrial enzyme. We have found that increased retention reflects cellular stress. This is in contrast to FLT, which is retained by thymidine kinase 1 (TK1) the cytosolic enzyme associated with normal DNA synthesis. We are now testing the hypothesis that imaging cellular stress with 18F-FMAU may provide an early measure of cancer treatment response. Furthermore, FMAU may be simpler to use than agents being developed to image apoptosis, since the time course of stress may be more predictable than changes in apoptosis, which are often short term. These approaches will need to be validated against more conventional measures of response and biopsies based measurements of cell proliferation and TK activity. We are also studying labeled drugs to image their in vivo pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. FAU {1-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl)-uracil} is a chemotherapeutic agent which is in phase I testing. We conducted the first-in human phase 0 study of 18F-FAU to determine its suitability for imaging and to determine its potential as an antineoplastic agent. A phase I study using unlabeled FAU has started at Karmanos Cancer Institute and uses 18F-FAU and PET to monitor pharmacodynamics in tumors.
The ultimate goal of our research is to understand the response of cancer to therapy using measurements of DNA synthetic pathways as imaged by positron emission tomography (PET). Ongoing studies have refined the techniques needed to obtain PET images with radiolabeled thymidine analogs, which are trapped in the DNA synthetic pathway. Studies that began in tissue culture and mice have now progressed to clinical trials. We have addressed a number of the problems associated with interpreting the PET images including the contributions to thymidine metabolism of intracellular pools, reutilization, and degradation. The most promising compound we have used to date is 18F-FLT (3'-deoxy-3'- fluorothymidine), which is an antiviral compound like AZT. It is trapped intracellularly after phosphorylation by thymidine kinase (TK) in a manner similar to the trapping of glucose analogs (FDG) after phosphorylation by hexokinase. This compound is stable to degradation and undergoes little metabolism, aside from glucuronidation. Studies in dogs and patients indicate that it readily visualizes proliferating organs such as the bone marrow, as well as tumors. Another analog, 18F-FMAU {1-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl)-thymine} is being studied in cell culture, animals and humans. Our in human studies found that FMAU was readily retained in tumors, but not in normally proliferating bone marrow. FMAU is retained by the action of thymidine kinase 2 (TK2), a mitochondrial enzyme. We have found that increased retention reflects cellular stress. This is in contrast to FLT, which is retained by thymidine kinase 1 (TK1) the cytosolic enzyme associated with normal DNA synthesis. We are now testing the hypothesis that imaging cellular stress with 18F-FMAU may provide an early measure of cancer treatment response. Furthermore, FMAU may be simpler to use than agents being developed to image apoptosis, since the time course of stress may be more predictable than changes in apoptosis, which are often short term. These approaches will need to be validated against more conventional measures of response and biopsies based measurements of cell proliferation and TK activity. We are also studying labeled drugs to image their in vivo pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. FAU {1-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl)-uracil} is a chemotherapeutic agent which is in phase I testing. We conducted the first-in human phase 0 study of 18F-FAU to determine its suitability for imaging and to determine its potential as an antineoplastic agent. A phase I study using unlabeled FAU has started at Karmanos Cancer Institute and uses 18F-FAU and PET to monitor pharmacodynamics in tumors.
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Journal of Clinical Oncologyno. 4_suppl (2025): 274-274
Aung Naing,Amit Mahipal,Milind Javle,Judy Wang,Todd M Bauer,David L Bajor,Anthony D Elias,Anthony Shields,Elizabeth Davis,Sant Chawla,Howard Safran,John D Powderly, Gina D'Amato, Christian F Meyer, Xiongwen Tang,Sheng Yao,Patricia Keegan
Journal of immunotherapy and precision oncologyno. 1 (2025): 71-81
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Journal of Clinical Oncologyno. 4_suppl (2025)
Clinical cancer research an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Researchno. 6 (2025): 1082-1090
Journal of Clinical Oncologyno. 4_suppl (2025): 613-613
Jim Abraham,Valeriy Domenyuk, Maria Perdigones Borderias,Sergey Klimov, Sourabh Antani,Takayuki Yoshino,Elisabeth Heath,Emil Lou,Stephen Liu,John Marshall, Wafik El-Deiry,Anthony Shields, Martin Dietrich,Yoshiaki Nakamura,Takao Fujisawa, George Demetri, Anna Barker,Joanne Xiu, Dominic Sacchetti, Seth Stahl, Robert Hahn-Lowry,Adam Stark,Jeffrey Swensen,George Poste, David Halbert,Matthew Oberley,George Sledge,David Spetzler
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Cancerno. 5 (2025): e35727-e35727
Daniel Magee,Valeriy Domenyuk,Jim Abraham, Nieves Perdigones Borderias,Jeff Swensen, Praveena Solipuram, Adanma Ayanambakkam, Raja Mehdi, Jagathi Challagalla,Elisabeth Heath,Megan Landsverk, Magdalena Jurkiewicz, Brian Shimkus, Ian Pinto, Daniel Patterson,David Hsiehchen, Supriya Koya,Bradley Somer, Michel Velez,Anthony F Shields,Jennifer Cultrera, Jennifer R Ribeiro, Robert Hahn-Lowry, George W Sledge,Matthew Oberley,Milan Radovich,David Spetzler
Clinical cancer research an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (2025)
Karam Ashouri,Joshua Millstein, Yan Yang,Joanne Xiu,Shivani Soni,Priya Jayachandran,Pooja Mittal,Sandra Algaze,Lesly Torres-Gonzalez, Unnati Hermant Shah,Anthony F. Shields,Richard M Goldberg,Emil Lou,Benjamin Adam Weinberg,John Marshall,Shannon M. Mumenthaler,Alan P. Venook,Stacey D Finley,Francesca Battaglin,Heinz-Josef Lenz
Journal of Clinical Oncologyno. 4_suppl (2025): 736-736
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#Papers: 462
#Citation: 12799
H-Index: 52
G-Index: 108
Sociability: 7
Diversity: 3
Activity: 364
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