Vaccines are not new. Well, not
vaccines that anticipate when we will get an infection and prime
our body’s immune system to beat it. But a new era of
vaccines is emerging armed to fight genetically sophisticated
diseases like cancer and HIV after they occur. The ANU laboratory
of Christopher Parish is leading the way.
|

|
|
Professor Chris Parish is pioneering
a new kind of vaccine to combat certain cancers.
|
Around 30 years ago, an idea about an unconventional way to
use the body’s immune system to attack disease began taking
shape in the mind and laboratory of Professor Christopher Parish.
So out of the ordinary was this idea that a pharmaceutical
company would reject it at the time as too left field. “We
don’t need a new way,” they would say, still buoyed
by the successes of recent vaccine developments that prevented
polio, whooping cough and smallpox.
Little did the company know that the premise they rejected
would lead to a new way of approaching vaccines for combating
infectious diseases that have emerged since, as well as cancer.
This leap forward is thanks to the long, laborious work of
discovery by Parish and his team in the Cancer and Vascular
Biology Group at The John Curtin School of Medical Research
(JCSMR).
Parish came to JCSMR in 1969 to continue to work alongside
immunologist Professor Gordon Ada, who had supervised his PhD
at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in Melbourne. He joined
the medical research school at a time when Ada and virologist
Professor Frank Fenner were at the height of discovery in their
respective fields and raising the international reputation of
JCSMR.
He very nearly didn’t take this path. He had studied
a generalist agricultural science degree in Melbourne, and taken
the PhD in immunology because it was available at the time and
he had enjoyed the little immunology he had done as an undergraduate.
But the environment at JCSMR set him firmly down the path of
immunology, which would see him follow in the footsteps of these
eminent scientists and make inroads into an emerging area of
the field: therapeutic immunology.
All the vaccines currently in use against bacterial and viral
infections are prophylactic: that is, they anticipate infection.
By injecting parts of pathogens into the body, the immune system
is trained to recognise the infection and fight it when it occurs.
This method dates back to the late 18th century when Edward
Jenner, the ‘father’ of vaccination, attempted to
vaccinate against smallpox using cowpox.
Parish’s work has focused on therapeutic vaccines, around
which a large field of research has recently sprung up. These
types of vaccines harness T-cells, not just antibodies, and
are administered to treat a disease once it has occurred.
Because of the complexities of this approach, the development
of such treatments is “problematic”, according to
Parish. There are currently no therapeutic vaccines in use,
but researchers hold great hope for their potential to fight
the “incredibly genetically unstable” diseases of
the 21st century including HIV, cancer and influenza.
“Most of the easy vaccines have been developed: smallpox,
measles, and polio – all of the injections you get when
you’re young are about training your immune system to
remember and recognise bacterial and viral infections as impostors
and fight them. The new vaccine for cervical cancer targeting
human pampilloma virus is also like this.
“The next frontier is therapeutic vaccines, but they’re
much more tricky and technical than prophylactic vaccines. There
are hundreds under development in labs around the world, but
none are routinely used in patients.”
As Parish investigated T-cell immunity further in these early
days his research began to split into two paths as his detailed
molecular studies provided insight into the mechanics of vascular
science, or the blood vessel system.
“I was looking at how cells of the immune system cross
blood vessel walls and enter tissues. As we investigated this,
it became clear we could apply this to other areas and, in particular,
cancer,” Parish says.
It became a focus of Parish’s research to harness aspects
of the vascular system in the fight against cancer and one that
has led to a successful collaboration with a pharmaceutical
company now developing a drug based on Parish’s enquiry.
The drug, called PI-88, utilises a two-pronged approach to halt
the growth and spread of solid cancers.
Firstly, there is the prevention of cancer cells escaping into
the blood stream from the main tumour that could potentially
cause a secondary tumour, or metastasis.
Parish and his team have developed a sugar molecule that inhibits
the enzyme heparanase that causes the breakdown of the basement
membrane lining blood vessels, which may allow cancerous cells
to enter the blood stream as well as escape from circulation
and enter distant organs.
The second part of PI-88’s actions is the inhibition
of the process of angiogenisis – the formation of new
blood vessels to the tumour – that feeds the tumour and
helps it to grow.
“Cancer tissue is like any tissue in the human body.
It needs a blood supply to thrive. Tumours establish blood vessels
that provide them with nutrients to grow and get larger. By
blocking the development of a blood supply by the tumour, we’re
ensuring that the tumour doesn’t get any larger.”
As this approach began to show promise, biotech company Progen
Pharmaceuticals recognised the potential of the research. Since
1993, when a commercialisation agreement negotiated between
Progen and ANU over two years was put in place, PI-88 has been
going through the long, detailed proof and production process,
with encouraging results.
The first phase of human trials of PI-88 was conducted in 1999
and since then a number of trials on different types of cancer
have taken place. A phase 3 trial of PI-88 in patients who have
had their cancer surgically removed from the liver is due to
begin in late 2007.
Results from the most recent phase 2 trial in these patients
provide an insight into the effect of PI-88. Treatment with
the drug increased the time of recurrence of the disease by
approximately 28 percent from 27 to 48 weeks.
The results are promising, but the development of a new drug
is a long and involved process and can take years of getting
the dosages right, identifying the best patient group to treat,
demonstrating efficacy and applying for registration. PI-88
may still not be available for a handful of years – although
Parish, along with cancer sufferers around the world, is hopeful
that it will successfully come to market sooner rather than
later.
Much of the development of PI-88 now lies with Progen, who Parish
says has been a good fit for PI-88 and as a commercialisation
partner with ANU. Parish has turned his research beyond PI-88
to devising a way to arm the immune system to, as he says, “finish
off” tumours.
In alliance with the laboratory of Dr Joseph Altin from the
School of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in the ANU College
of Science, this is another research project that is currently
being tested and developed in the form of a cancer vaccine,
called Lipovaxin.
Lipovaxin uses the immune system approach to cancer treatment.
It essentially arms dendritic cells – which are crucial
to mobilising a T-cell immune response to infections –
to activate an attack against the tumour cells.
Lipovaxin primes the dendritic cells with a cancer antigen,
and they present this antigen to the killer T-cells and other
T-cell types. This activates them to seek out the tumour cells
in the body. They invade the tumour cells and either kill the
tumour cells by direct cell contact or recruit in other white
cells, such as eosinophils, that explode, killing the cancer
cells and those around them. Early tests in mice have shown
that the cancer can almost be completely destroyed using this
approach.
Cancer immunotherapy is a therapeutic technique which is already
being experimentally used on patients in cancer treatment centres,
mostly overseas. The current approach requires dendritic cells
to be taken from the body, primed with antigen and grown in
culture over days in a lab, and then reinjected back into the
body.
In comparison, Lipovaxin is injected into the patient as a
first step, priming the dendritic cells inside the body to mobilise
the immune system to attack the tumour.
“We envisage this vaccine would be administered after
initial treatments and finish the cancer off,” Parish
says. “What’s very exciting about it is that it
can be ‘modified’ to induce immunity against many
different cancer types.”
Lipovaxin – which is being commercially developed by
biotechnology company Lipotek – will this year begin phase
one human trials in Australian melanoma patients.
Although it might seem that Parish has the quest for a cancer
vaccine all wrapped up, he’s not jetting off into the
sunset with novel in hand and sunshade in luggage just yet.
Another aspect of the tumour environment he and his team are
currently tackling with a therapeutic approach in mind is the
role of platelets in tumour growth and metastasis. “It
seems as if, to put it simply, the platelets are recruited by
some tumours to help them become invasive quite quickly,”
Parish says. “Blocking platelet cell and tumour cell interaction
may also have therapeutic potential.”
We can only hope. But given Parish’s history for finding
his way from a small idea to big potential for cancer treatment
that could benefit millions of people, perhaps such hope is
well-founded.
^^
|