A first-in-human phase 0 clinical study of RNA interference–based spherical nucleic acids in patients with recurrent glioblastoma

Priya Kumthekar(Northwestern University), Caroline H. Ko(Northwestern University), Tatjana Paunesku(Northwestern University), Karan Dixit(Northwestern University), Adam M. Sonabend(Northwestern University), Orin Bloch(Northwestern University), Matthew C. Tate(Northwestern University), Margaret Schwartz(Northwestern University), Laura Zuckerman(Northwestern University), Ray Lezon(Northwestern University), Rimas V. Lukas(Northwestern University), Borko Jovanovic(Northwestern University), Kathleen McCortney(Northwestern University), Howard Colman(University of Utah), Si Chen(Argonne National Laboratory), Barry Lai(Argonne National Laboratory), Olga Antipova(Argonne National Laboratory), Junjing Deng(Argonne National Laboratory), Luxi Li(Argonne National Laboratory), Serena Tommasini-Ghelfi(Northwestern University), Lisa Hurley(Northwestern University), Dusten Unruh(Northwestern University), Nitya V. Sharma(Northwestern University), Manoj Kandpal(Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University), Fotini M. Kouri(Northwestern University), Ramana V. Davuluri(Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University), Daniel J. Brat(Northwestern University), Miguel Muzzio(IIT Research Institute), Mitchell Glass(Wilmington University), Vinod Vijayakumar(Wilmington University), Jeremy D. Heidel(Informulate (United States)), Francis J. Giles(Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University), Ann K. Adams(Northwestern University), C. David James(Northwestern University), Gayle E. Woloschak(Northwestern University), Craig Horbinski(Northwestern University), Alexander H. Stegh(Northwestern University)
Science Translational Medicine
March 10, 2021
Cited by 312Open Access
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Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is one of the most difficult cancers to effectively treat, in part because of the lack of precision therapies and limited therapeutic access to intracranial tumor sites due to the presence of the blood-brain and blood-tumor barriers. We have developed a precision medicine approach for GBM treatment that involves the use of brain-penetrant RNA interference-based spherical nucleic acids (SNAs), which consist of gold nanoparticle cores covalently conjugated with radially oriented and densely packed small interfering RNA (siRNA) oligonucleotides. On the basis of previous preclinical evaluation, we conducted toxicology and toxicokinetic studies in nonhuman primates and a single-arm, open-label phase 0 first-in-human trial (NCT03020017) to determine safety, pharmacokinetics, intratumoral accumulation and gene-suppressive activity of systemically administered SNAs carrying siRNA specific for the GBM oncogene Bcl2Like12 (Bcl2L12). Patients with recurrent GBM were treated with intravenous administration of siBcl2L12-SNAs (drug moniker: NU-0129), at a dose corresponding to 1/50th of the no-observed-adverse-event level, followed by tumor resection. Safety assessment revealed no grade 4 or 5 treatment-related toxicities. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, x-ray fluorescence microscopy, and silver staining of resected GBM tissue demonstrated that intravenously administered SNAs reached patient tumors, with gold enrichment observed in the tumor-associated endothelium, macrophages, and tumor cells. NU-0129 uptake into glioma cells correlated with a reduction in tumor-associated Bcl2L12 protein expression, as indicated by comparison of matched primary tumor and NU-0129-treated recurrent tumor. Our results establish SNA nanoconjugates as a potential brain-penetrant precision medicine approach for the systemic treatment of GBM.


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