New Drug Shows Promise for Treating Rare and Aggressive Gliomas

MRI scan showing brain cancer. Credit: Michelle Monje, MD, PhD, Stanford University

An experimental drug may provide a new treatment option for some patients with rare incurable brain tumours, according to an analysis published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Diffuse midline gliomas are diagnosed in about 800 people per year in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A subset of particularly aggressive diffuse midline gliomas are caused by a H3 K27M mutation and the only effective treatment is radiation, as the location of the tumour in the brain makes surgery difficult. Even with radiation, relapse is virtually inevitable and more than 70% of patients with this subtype of brain tumour die from the cancer, according to the National Institutes of Health.

In the study, investigators analysed the results of five previous clinical trials testing the effectiveness of dordaviprone, an experimental drug which works by blocking a certain protein in tumours with the mutation.

The study included results from 50 patients (including four children) with H3 K27M–mutant diffuse midline gliomas and found that 30% of patients responded well to the drug. The most common side effect reported was fatigue, according to the study.

Now, the researchers are launching a trial at Northwestern Medicine hospitals to investigate the drug’s effectiveness in newly diagnosed patients.

Source: Northwestern University