Overcoming stromal barriers to therapeutics in pancreas cancer

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $265,568 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDA) are unrivaled in their lethality. PDAs have the highest 1- year, 5-year, and 10-year mortalities of any cancer and are expected to become the second-leading cause of cancer-related death by 2030. An invasive PDA represents the coordinated evolution of cell- intrinsic and extrinsic processes and capabilities that subvert and repurpose the dictums of normal tissue composition, architecture, and physiology to foster unbridled growth and colonization. This new organizational entity is constructed largely at the behest of the mutated epithelial cell. The resulting PDA neo-organ contains a minority of tumor epithelial cells amidst a heterogeneous sea of non- epithelial cells; a complex interstitial stew of proteins, proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans, together with both freely mobile and complexed water; and a paucity of vessels that otherwise resemble a normal vasculature in lacking fenestrae or interendothelial junctions, but that are collapsed under intense interstitial pressures. We have undertaken a systematic exploration of the cell autonomous and non-cell autonomous processes that drive PDA pathogenesis and resistance. We have developed genetically engineered animal models that faithfully recapitulate the clinical syndrome, metastatic behavior, histopathology and molecular features of the human disease as primary platforms to both uncover critical principles of disease biology and to rigorously test strategies to overcome them. Through such investigations we have identified unusually high concentrations of intratumoral hyaluronan (HA) as the primary culprit in the extraordinarily elevated interstitial pressures in PDA that, in turn, cause the vascular collapse and hypoperfusion characteristic of this disease. The stromal barrier to perfusion also serves as a primary mechanism of drug resistance in limiting the penetration of systemically delivered agents. We have additionally identified multiple mechanisms of immune suppression that prevent the development of an endogenous effector T cell response. Collectively, these unique aspects of stromal biology in PDA conspire to create a drug- and immune-privileged sanctuary for unimpeded growth of the pancreas cancer cell. Very recently, we have elaborated strategies to overcome critical aspects of these physical and immunological barriers to therapy revealing a perhaps unexpected degree of vulnerability once the barriers are breached. We describe a series of continuing investigations into this overarching strategy of stromal re-engineering to build upon the significant inroads made – and the important lessons learned – in the hopes of radically transforming the approach and prognosis for this formidable disease.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10467650
Project number
2R01CA161112-12A1
Recipient
FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER CENTER
Principal Investigator
Sunil R Hingorani
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$265,568
Award type
2
Project period
2011-09-22 → 2022-12-31