Locations:
Search IconSearch
October 8, 2019/Cancer

Drug Repurposing for the Treatment of Childhood Leukemia

The effect of mefloquine on acute leukemia cell lines

650×450-Corey-drug-research

By Seth Corey, MD, MPH

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

Many patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL) of childhood suffer significant adverse effects from conventional chemotherapy agents. Therapy-related toxicities include tumor lysis syndrome, thrombosis, bleeding, infection, mucositis, pancreatitis and hypoglycemia. As a result, we continue to seek additional therapies with less toxicity.

Drug repurposing

Many drugs used to treat adults have not been tested in patients under 18 years old. Developing new drugs is an expensive and time-consuming undertaking, especially for pediatric conditions for which small numbers of patients prevent the economic viability of phase 1 clinical trials. Drug repurposing is one way to speed the process, getting new anti-leukemic agents to market—and to the children who need them—safely and efficiently. In drug repurposing, we test therapies that have already proven to be safe in children, with well-established toxicity profiles and pharmacogenomics as potential agents in different diseases.

One drug with the potential to be repurposed is mefloquine, which previous research has already identified a potential agent against leukemia cells. Mefloquine, an antimalarial drug, may target the process of autophagy in leukemia cells — a survival, recycling mechanism promoting cancer proliferation. We recently completed a study of the in vitro efficacy and mechanism of mefloquine on acute leukemia cell lines.

Preclinical work establishes the efficacy of an old drug for a new indication. Since we already know the toxicity profile of mefloquine, our goal in this research is to whether and how the medication is effective. In this study, we sought to observe cell proliferation, viability, apoptosis and autophagy in AML and ALL cell lines treated with mefloquine. This study was presented at the 2019 American Society of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Conference in New Orleans.

Advertisement

Mefloquine achieves cell death

We treated AML and ALL cell lines (i.e., NB4 [promyelocytic], U937 [monoblastic], Thp-1 [monoblastic] and Jurkat [T-lymphoblastic) with mefloquine. We measured cell proliferation using the 3-(4,5-Dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2, 5-Diphenyltetrazolium Bromide (MTT) colorimetric assay and cell viability using the trypan blue (TB) assay. We performed Western blotting on NB4 and U937 cell lines using apoptosis markers PARP-1 and Caspase-3, autophagy markers Atg7, Atg5, P62 and LC3B, and ER stress marker CHOP.

Our hypothesis was that treatment of the cell lines with mefloquine would decrease cell proliferation and viability by targeting autophagy and inducing apoptosis. The MTT assay revealed decreased metabolic activity of the leukemic cells.

We also observed decreased cell proliferation and viability. The leukemic cells did not die from a caspase 3-dependent mechanism.

Our study suggests mefloquine is a potential drug for the treatment of leukemia; however, further investigation is required to determine the mechanism by which it targets autophagy.

Next steps

Our next step in repurposing mefloquine is to secure funding for critical in vivo trials in order to obtain the late pre-clinical data necessary for a successful investigational drug application.

Advertisement

Related Articles

Doctors working on MGUS screening study
March 18, 2024/Cancer/Research
Pilot Study Aims for Early Identification of Multiple Myeloma Precursor Among Black Patients

First-of-its-kind research investigates the viability of standard screening to reduce the burden of late-stage cancer diagnoses

Hematologist at Cleveland Clinic
March 14, 2024/Cancer/Blood Cancers
Advances in Mantle Cell Lymphoma Treatment (Podcast)

Global R&D efforts expanding first-line and relapse therapy options for patients

Physician with patient
March 6, 2024/Cancer/Research
Targeting Uncontrolled Erythrocytosis in Polycythemia Vera with Rusfertide

Study demonstrates ability to reduce patients’ reliance on phlebotomies to stabilize hematocrit levels

Dr. Jagadeesh at Cleveland Clinic
February 28, 2024/Cancer/Blood Cancers
Treating Patient with Systemic T-Cell Lymphoma and Graft-Versus-Host Disease

A case study on the value of access to novel therapies through clinical trials

Doctor measuring patient's waist size
February 26, 2024/Cancer/Research
Impact of Obesity on GVHD & Transplant Outcomes in Hematologic Malignancies

Findings highlight an association between obesity and an increased incidence of moderate-severe disease

Physician with patient
February 21, 2024/Cancer/Research
Strategies for Improving Clinical Trial Equity

Cleveland Clinic Cancer Institute takes multi-faceted approach to increasing clinical trial access 23456

How antibody drug conjugates work
February 13, 2024/Cancer/Research
Real-World Use of Trastuzumab Deruxtecan

Key learnings from DESTINY trials

CQD-4445459-rotz-650×450
February 7, 2024/Cancer
Advances in Bone Marrow Transplant Have Improved Outcomes in Fanconi Anemia

Overall survival in patients treated since 2008 is nearly 20% higher than in earlier patients

Ad