Lab results confirm promise of new immunotherapy gel for kids cancer

19/07/2023 | 3 mins

New research from The Kids Research Institute Australia and The University of Western Australia has found a gel applied during surgery to treat sarcoma tumours is both safe and highly effective at preventing the cancer from growing back.

The findings, published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine, have formed the scientific backbone of a trial under way in Perth to test the feasibility and safety of the gel on pet dogs.

The polymer-filled gel is packed with a type of immunotherapy and is applied inside the wound when the tumour is removed, drawing immune cells to the wound/resection site to “mop up” any remaining cancer cells.

The research team, led by Telethon Kids Cancer Centre head Associate Professor Joost Lesterhuis, discovered a significant reduction in cancer recurrence in laboratory mouse models treated with the immunotherapy gel.

Associate Professor Killugudi Swaminatha , Dr Francois Rwandamuriye and Associate Professor Joost LesterhuisImage: Associate Professor Killugudi Swaminatha , Dr Francois Rwandamuriye and Associate Professor Joost Lesterhuis.

The study’s lead author, Dr Francois Rwandamuriye said the early lab work paved the way for the canine trial.

“The main work we did in the early stages was about optimisation of the gel so that it can be feasible for use in surgery, so making sure it was the right consistency to be applied easily inside the wound,” he said.

“We were able to show in mice that the gel is effective in delivering the immunotherapy at the correct dose and that it was effective in stopping the cancer from recurring.

“The early lab work also satisfied us that the gel is safe to use.”

The research, which was conducted over several years in the labs at The Kids Research Institute Australia in Perth, initially involved determining what type of materials the gel should be made from and which immunotherapy drugs would be most effective.

The clinical trial in dogs is well underway at Perth Veterinary Specialists and showing promising results, demonstrating that the gel was safe, easy to use by the veterinary surgeons, and resulted in strong immune cell activation.

Sarcoma presents similarly in humans as it does in dogs, with solid tumours forming in soft tissues such as muscle, fat or connective tissues, or on bones and joints, and the first treatment in both is always surgery.

The Kids Research Institute Australia Cancer Centre head, Associate Professor Joost Lesterhuis, said this research laid the foundation for the exciting work that’s underway to develop the gel for use in humans.

“There are a lot of aspects to translating this work, which is why the early work that took place in our labs was very detailed and wide-ranging,” he said.

“It also helped us to identify some new biomarkers to determine what types of cancers can be effectively treated by this immunotherapy gel.”

Immunotherapy works by activating the patient’s own immune system to fight the cancer, but it is typically administered through the bloodstream, which can result in severe side effects and making it ineffective for localised treatment of solid tumours.

The gel was developed in collaboration with molecular scientists at The University of Western Australia, led by Associate Professor Killugudi Swaminatha Iyer.

Associate Professor Swaminatha-Iyer, from UWA’s School of Molecular Sciences, said the gel is made from natural materials.

“The gel is made of long polymers which are natural and that are broken down by the body itself,” he said.

“For this treatment, the team has tagged on some immunotherapy to those long polymers which are then slowly these are released in the body and the polymers themselves are broken down.”

It is hoped the immunotherapy gel will be proven safe and effective for trial in humans within the next five years.

This work was funded by Cancer Australia/The Kids’ Cancer Project and supported by funding from the Sock it to Sarcoma! Foundation, the Australian and New Zealand Sarcoma Association, Perpetual, The Simon Lee Foundation and the Child Cancer Research Foundation.


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