Developing New Treatments For Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
Main Category: Breast CancerAlso Included In: Clinical Trials / Drug Trials
Article Date: 04 Apr 2009 - 3:00 PDT
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Brian Rowan, Ph.D., professor of Cancer Research for the Tulane Cancer Center, is studying treatment options for an aggressive type of breast cancer that is prevalent in New Orleans among African-American women triple-negative breast cancer. The term triple-negative refers to the fact that these tumors do not have estrogen, progesterone or HER2 receptors, effectively eliminating hormonal and targeted herceptin therapy from the list of possible treatment options. This limits therapeutic choices for these patients to surgery, radiation and chemotherapy.
Rowan is studying a therapy that targets a protein called Src kinase, which is required for tumor growth in triple negative breast cancer. Rowan and his team are working with Kinex Pharmaceuticals in Buffalo, N.Y. to test a new Src inhibitor called KX-01. Phase I trials for this new drug are complete and preliminary results indicate that KX-01 kills triple-negative breast cancer cells in both Petri dishes and in animal tumor models. "KX-01 in combination with chemotherapy kills even more cancer cells," said Rowan.
He hopes to begin Phase II trials for KX-01 alone or in combination with chemotherapy for triple-negative breast cancer patients here in New Orleans by 2010.
Rowan is available to talk about the prevalence of triple-negative breast cancer and the future of drug treatments to stop its progression. He is also an expert in understanding the roles of nuclear receptors estrogen, progesterone, and HER2 in breast cancer treatment, and understanding the role of mesenchymal stem cells in breast cancer metastasis to the bone.
Tulane University
215 Gibson Hall
New Orleans
LA 70118-5698
United States
http://www.tulane.edu
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Clarification On This Article
posted by Brian Rowan on 10 May 2009 at 1:29 pmThis article appears to have been abstracted from a recent article published in our Tulane New Wave online news story (http://www.som.tulane.edu/cancer/cores/Breakthroughs3.09.pdf).
While reference to our preclinical drug study is correct and the data is indeed very encouraging, there are a few misleading remarks related to my own expertise in this present article. I am a Ph.D. laboratory scientist, not a clinician. I am not really qualified to “talk about the prevalence of triple-negative breast cancer” nor am I an expert in all the “future of drug treatments to stop its progression”. While I am an expert in certain aspects of breast cancer research I am not an overall expert in triple negative disesse. There are indeed many bona fide experts and opinion leaders in triple negative breast cancer that can provide an informed perspective. Our original Tulane story (see above) talked about a collaborative team of scientists, surgeon, pathologist and medical oncologists that are working together.
Brian G. Rowan, Ph.D.
Gerald & Flora Jo Mansfield Piltz Professor II of Cancer Research
Tulane Cancer Center
Associate Professor and Vice Chair
Department of Structural & Cellular Biology, SL49
Center for Gene Therapy
Tulane University School of Medicine
1430 Tulane Avenue
New Orleans, Louisiana 70112-2699
Office: 504-988-1365
Lab: 504-988-1563
Fax: 504-988-1687
email: browan@tulane.edu
Webpage: http://www.som.tulane.edu/scb/faculty/browan.htm
Metaplastic Breast Cancer - Triple Negative
posted by Dawn Smith on 8 Sep 2010 at 5:32 amAs Black woman who is a current triple negative Metaplastic BC patient, this article gives me hope for a better treatment of my disease. I would love to be kept informed of your progress!
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