loader image
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
83.6 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

Engineering A Promising Cancer Treatment

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

Researchers find a way to deliver drugs directly to cancerous cells while reducing the toxic effects on the rest of the body

Raimund Ober, Ph.D.., and wife, E. Sally Ward, Ph.D., research professor at the Texas A&M College of Medicine are joint corresponding authors of the paper on Antibody-Drug Conjugates published in the journal Nature Biotechnology.

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

Despite advances in early detection and treatment, 25 percent of the deaths in the United States occur as a result of cancer.

Antibody-Drug Conjugates, or ADCs, represent a promising treatment for cancer. An ADC is, as its name suggests, an antibody linked to a potent drug that can kill cells. The antibody is designed to bind to receptors on the outside of target cells and then carries the attached drug into the cell.

ADCs usually work well when the antibody attaches to receptors that are especially common on tumor cells. That way, the drug will primarily enter the cancerous cells, leaving the healthy cells alone.

- Advertisement -

However, despite improvements in ADC technology over the past 15 years or so, many ADCs have faced problems with atoxicity towards normal tissue during their use in clinical trials. This prompted Texas A&M College of Medicine and College of Engineering researchers to collaborate to engineer an ADC that will be more effective against tumor cells while not being as toxic to healthy cells.

Their work, which has been funded by the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) and the National Institutes of Health, was published in the journal Nature Biotechnology.

“There is such a thing as a therapeutic window,” said E. Sally Ward, Ph.D., a research professor at the College of Medicine and joint corresponding author of the paper with Raimund Ober, Ph.D. “This is the difference between the amount of drug that is needed to kill the tumor cells and the amount that results in off-target toxicity towards normal cells. For effective ADCs, we want this window to be as large as possible.”

To accomplish that, Ward and her team created an ADC that is sensitive to pH levels so that it separates from its target receptor after it enters the cell. This allows for the reloading of the receptor with additional ADC and more effective delivery of the drug to target cells.

- Advertisement -

“This truly was an interdisciplinary project,” Ward said. “It has involved (bio)engineers and biologists using a combination of antibody engineering, microscopy, molecular modeling and studies in preclinical cancer models.”

The researchers have tested their ADC on both cell lines and in preclinical models. “In our models, there was three-fold more drug delivery than with the parent ADC that had not been engineered,” Ward said. “That means that we could use lower doses and still obtain therapeutic effects, which is expected to result in reductions in the toxicity towards normal cells.”

The ADC used in this study targets the receptor HER2, commonly present in breast cancers. Importantly, this approach to generate ADCs is a platform technology that is expected to work for many different types of tumors and tumor markers, from prostate cancer to cancers of the blood. “We hope this will be able to move into clinical trials and eventually help people with many different types of cancer,” Ward said.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

Texans Make History with Passage of Proposition 14

In a landmark victory for public health and scientific innovation, Texas voters have overwhelmingly approved Proposition 14, authorizing a $3 billion investment to fund the Dementia Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (DPRIT). This historic vote funds the largest state-funded initiative in the nation dedicated to dementia research and prevention.

Full Circle of Healing

The appointment of Roxanne Ramirez as Chair of the Hidalgo County Mental Health Coalition marks a defining chapter in her lifelong commitment to advocacy and service. “The appointment on behalf of Judge Richard Cortez to serve as the Chair for the Hidalgo County Mental Health Coalition is both humbling and deeply meaningful to me,” she said. “I have served in this position for one year, and I am honored to work alongside the coalition members as we continue to build on the strong foundation that my predecessor set.”

STHS & Prominence Health Hosting Joint Pain Educational Seminar for Seniors, Nov. 7th

Mega Doctor News It’s a fact of life: Aging causes “wear and tear” on the body’s musculoskeletal system, including natural deterioration of the cartilage and...

DHR Health’s 15th Annual International Behavioral Medicine Conference, Nov. 21-22

DHR Health will host its 15th Annual International Behavioral Medicine Conference on November 21 and 22, 2025, at the Edinburg Conference Center at Renaissance, located at 118 Paseo del Prado.
- Advertisement -
×