Double-pronged attack on advanced prostate cancer shows promise
admin | October 15, 2025 2:22 PM CST
A double-pronged attack on advanced prostate cancer could help treat as many as two in five patients with late-stage disease, scientists have found.
Using drugs that are already being used to treat other cancers, or those in development, can slow tumour growth and trigger cancer cell death, experts found.
Experts at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, tested the new combination against cancer cells which had become resistant to hormone therapy, knowing that among this patient group outcomes are poor when they become resistant to treatment.
They set out to find a combination of drugs which attack proteins in the body which promote cancer cell survival.
MCL1 is a protein that promotes cancer cell survival and protein AKT plays a key role in a mechanism that many cancer cells rely on to survive, grow and resist treatment.
The research, published in the journal Nature Communications, found that inhibiting MCL1 and AKT at the same time triggered prostate cancer cell death.
Scientists pointed out that in humans, drugs to target MCL1 have had limited success in the past, so they set out to indirectly target the protein by inhibiting another protein that regulates MCL1 levels, using the drug fadraciclib - a drug discovered by The ICR a few years ago which is currently in clinical trial for blood cancers.
The team inhibited AKT using either a drug called ipatasertib, which is being investigated as a potential treatment for a number of different cancers, or another called capivasertib - used to treat certain types of breast cancer.
In lab studies, they found that combining fadraciclib with either capivasertib or ipatasertib triggered prostate cancer cell death.
Specifically, they found that prostate cancer cells which had a certain type of tumour which affected 40% of patients, known as PTEN-loss/PI3K-activated, responded best to the combinations.
Subsequent tests in mice with this tumour type revealed the combination significantly slowed cancer growth, according to the study, which was funded by The Wellcome Trust, Prostate Cancer Foundation, and Prostate Cancer UK.
They also found that the drug combination had killed cancer cells, in addition to slowing their growth.
Using either drug alone had no effect on tumour growth, they found.
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