Cancer continues to be a growing health issue. Overall five-year survival rates have changed only marginally over the past three decades and success rates in putting cancer drugs through the clinic have not improved. These facts highlight an unmet need not only for new therapies but, more importantly, for novel approaches toward the discovery of safe anti-cancer agents that can more effectively negotiate the increasingly complex obstacles of clinical trials. Medros has a long term goal of impacting the field of cancer not only by putting better drugs into the clinic, but doing so by developing a different approach to drug discovery. This Phase I proposal emphasizes the concept of whole-organism screening, a common paradigm in the early days of the pharmaceutical industry. Our advancing knowledge of cancer has emphasized how the multifactorial problem of tumorigenesis relies on many features that cannot be recapitulated ex vivo, in particular with regards to tumor metastasis. However, a whole-animal screening approach utilizing mammals is not practical due to the immense cost and time required. In response to these issues, Medros was founded on a proprietary platform optimized for high-throughput drug screening in vivo by modeling disease in the fruit fly Drosophila. An important proof-of-concept for this approach came from our academic collaborators, who have used this approach to demonstrate activity of a drug now in Phase III clinical trials for Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma. In this Proposal, Medros will further develop its proprietary platform by establishing a more sophisticated and complex multi-hit cancer model. Our collaborators have demonstrated that activation of Src and Ras - two oncogenic pathways present in many tumors -results in aggressive tumors that are lethal to the developing flies. The major objectives of this Phase I proposal are (i) to optimize use of this lethality for high-throughput compound screening and (ii) to perform a pilot screen for compounds that block Ras/Src-mediated tumorigenesis and improve whole-animal survival. Medros' ultimate vision is to validate a more fully in vivo approach to drug discovery from fly to rodent to man.

Public Health Relevance

Cancer is a growing global problem. It is the second leading cause of death in this country, accounting for nearly one in four deaths. This proposal develops a novel whole animal approach with Drosophila to screen drug libraries for tumor invasion and metastasis. Our goal is to identify promising compounds that will reduce the risk of the most dangerous aspect for most solid tumors: tumor cell invasion and metastasis. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase I (R43)
Project #
1R43CA136051-01
Application #
7537760
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-ONC-L (14))
Program Officer
Kurtz, Andrew J
Project Start
2008-07-02
Project End
2009-12-31
Budget Start
2008-07-02
Budget End
2009-12-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$132,480
Indirect Cost
Name
Medros, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
610535499
City
St. Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63108