Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Designated organic active ingredient containing – Carbohydrate doai
Reexamination Certificate
2000-04-21
2002-05-28
Nguyen, Dave T. (Department: 1635)
Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions
Designated organic active ingredient containing
Carbohydrate doai
C424S093200, C435S320100
Reexamination Certificate
active
06395715
ABSTRACT:
The present invention relates to methods and compositions that provide for the diagnosis and treatment of prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia. A particular aspect of the invention relates to methods and compositions containing compounds which inhibit phospholipase A
2
, particularly those that contain uteroglobin, uteroglobin muteins, uteroglobin mimetics, peptide analogs of uteroglobins, lipocortins, lipocortin muteins and peptide analogs of lipocortins. Further compositions of the invention include other types of active ingredients in combination with those described above.
The present invention also relates to methods for gauging the metastatic potential of tumors of epithelial cell origin by determining an effector of arachidonic acid release in cells of a tumor-containing tissue. This aspect of the invention particularly relates to determining uteroglobin protein or mRNA in cells of a biopsy sample to determine metastatic potential of a prostatic tumor.
The present invention further relates to methods and compositions that prevent or inhibit metastases of cancers of epithelial cell origin, especially human prostate cancers. A particular aspect of the invention relates to methods and compositions that inhibit arachidonic acid release in cells of these cancers and inhibit or prevent metastasis. In one aspect in this regard, the invention particularly relates to methods and compositions that inhibit phospholipase A
2
that mediates arachidonic acid release in the cancer cells. Compositions of the invention also particularly include those that contain uteroglobin, uteroglobin muteins, peptide analogs of uteroglobins, lipocortins, lipocortin muteins and peptide analogs of lipocortins that inhibit arachidonic acid release by cancer cells. Further useful in this regard are mimetic compounds, particularly uteroglobin and lipocortin mimetics. In this regard, the invention relates especially to compositions that contain mimetics of uteroglobin, particularly of human uteroglobin. Further compositions of the invention include other types of active ingredients in combination with those that inhibit arachidonic acid release.
The invention also particularly relates to methods to prevent or inhibit metastases of human cancers of epithelial cell origin by administering the foregoing compositions. Especially in this regard the invention relates to methods using human uteroglobin to inhibit or prevent metastasis of human prostate cancers. Further, this aspect of the invention may be accomplished by genetic therapy.
Methods and compositions of the invention may be used by themselves and with other treatment modalities.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Cancers develop from uncontrolled multiplication of cells. All cancers are life threatening. Even when cancer does not result in death, it is permanently debilitating, not only to the patient, but also to family, friends and co-workers. Too often, moreover, cancers prove fatal. The personal and public loss from this cluster of diseases, which cause a significant fraction of all premature deaths, is beyond estimation.
Although effective treatment modalities have been developed in a few cases, many cancers remain refractory to currently available therapies. Particularly difficult to treat are metastatic cancers. These cancers pose the highest risk to patients and, for optimal prognosis, often must be treated by aggressive methods that present increased risks of deleterious side-effects. Therefore, there is a great need for methods that accurately distinguish those tumors that are likely to metastasize from those that are unlikely to do so. Furthermore, methods for treating metastatic cancers often are inadequate, and there also is a clear need for improved anti-metastatic agents and methods to treat metastatic cancers.
Similarly, there is a great need for methods that accurately identify cells that are associated with prostate cancer, such as those found in prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN). Current diagnostic methods are inadequate to differentiate between PIN and normal cells. Thus, there is a clear need for improved early detection of PIN which may allow for early diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of cancer.
Metastatic cancers originate from a primary tumor. Metastasis of the primary tumor produces secondary tumors and disseminated cancer. It is well known that both primary and secondary tumors shed large numbers of cells. The shed cells can spread through the body. For instance, a primary tumor may damage the surrounding lymph or circulatory vessels, allowing entry of shed cells into the lymph or circulatory systems, and hastening their spread in the body. Moreover, shedding of cells by cancerous tumors increases during surgery and radiotherapy.
Most shed cells do not form new tumors. To do so such cells must surmount a series of physical and physiological barriers. In fact, a series of distinct events must occur for metastasis to occur. The primary tumor physically must (i) invade interstitial space of the primary tissue. In particular, it must (ii) penetrate the basement membrane of the tissue. For most metastases the tumor must damage the endothelial cell wall of lymphatic or vascular vessels to provide access to shed cells. Cells that enter the lymph or blood must (iii) survive hemodynamic stress and host defenses in the circulation and, furthermore, (iv) the cells must lodge at a new site in the circulatory system, a process that apparently involves aggregated platelets. A cell then must (v) extravasate out of the vessel into the interstitial space. Finally, it must (vi) invade the interstitial space of the secondary organ and proliferate in the new location. Although the process of metastasis is physiologically complex, the overall pattern of metastasis is general to many types of cancers.
The metastatic process also clearly involves complex intracellular mechanisms that alter cancerous cells and their interactions with surrounding cells and tissues. For instance, cancerous cells are characterized by aberrant expression of adhesion proteins, enzymes that degrade matrix components, autocrine factors, ligand-responsive receptors, factors of angiogenesis and prostaglandins, to name a few. In particular, the signaling pathways that initiate tumor cell migration are among the least understood aspects of invasion and metastasis. Currently, it is thought that proliferation of many cancerous cells depends upon specific ligand-receptor interactions. Thus far, however, it has not been possible to use this paradigm, or other concepts of the underlying mechanisms of metastasis, to develop a therapy that prevents or effectively inhibits metastasis of metastatic cancers.
The complexity of the processes involved in metastasis, and the lack of understanding of underlying molecular mechanisms, have made it particularly difficult, in some cases, to distinguish tumors that are likely to metastasize from those that are unlikely to do so. The inability to discern the metastatic potential of tumors precludes accurate prognosis and leads, inevitably, to the therapeutic intervention that either is too aggressive or insufficiently aggressive. Furthermore, for all types of cancers it has seen difficult or impossible, thus far, to develop treatments that inhibit or prevent the spread of metastatic tumors. Clearly, there remains a great need for methods to accurately determine the metastatic potential of tumors and for effective anti-metastatic compositions and methods.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide methods and compositions for differentiating PIN from normal prostate epithelia.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide methods and compositions for early detection of prostate cancer and cells associated with prostate cancer.
It is another object of the present invention to provide methods for inhibiting or preventing metastasis.
It is another object of the present invention to provide compositions for inhibiting or preventing metastasis.
In accomplishing the foregoing objects, there has
Manyak Michael J.
Patierno Steven R.
Juneau Todd L.
Nath Gary M.
Nath & Associates PLLC
Nguyen Dave T.
The George Washington University Medical Center
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