We can hack our immune cells to fight cancer | Elizabeth Wayne

84,635 views ・ 2017-11-07

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Translator: Reviewer: Daban Q. Jaff
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After decades of research
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and billions of dollars spent in clinical trials,
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we still have a problem with cancer drug delivery.
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We still give patients chemotherapy,
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which is so non-specific
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that even though it kills the cancer cells,
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it kind of kills the rest of your body, too.
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And yes, we have developed more selective drugs,
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but it's still a challenge to get them into the tumor,
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and they end up accumulating in the other organs as well
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or passing through your urine,
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which is a total waste.
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And fields like mine have emerged
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where we try to encapsulate these drugs
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to protect them as they travel through the body.
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But these modifications cause problems
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that we make more modifications to fix.
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So what I'm really trying to say is we need a better drug delivery system.
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And I propose,
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rather than using solely human design,
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why not use nature's?
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Immune cells are these versatile vehicles that travel throughout our body,
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patrolling for signs of disease
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and arriving at a wound mere minutes after injury.
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So I ask you guys:
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If immune cells are already traveling to places of injury or disease
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in our bodies,
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why not add an extra passenger?
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Why not use immune cells to deliver drugs
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to cure some of our biggest problems
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in disease?
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I am a biomedical engineer,
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and I want to tell you guys a story about how I use immune cells
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to target one of the largest problems in cancer.
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Did you know that over 90 percent of cancer deaths
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can be attributed to its spread?
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So if we can stop these cancer cells
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from going from the primary tumor to a distant site,
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we can stop cancer right in its tracks
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and give people more of their lives back.
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To do this special mission,
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we decided to deliver a nanoparticle made of lipids,
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which are the same materials that compose your cell membrane.
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And we've added two special molecules.
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One is called e-selectin,
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which acts as a glue
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that binds the nanoparticle to the immune cell.
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And the second one is called trail.
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Trail is a therapeutic drug that kills cancer cells
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but not normal cells.
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Now, when you put both of these together,
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you have a mean killing machine on wheels.
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To test this, we ran an experiment in a mouse.
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So what we did was we injected the nanoparticles,
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and they bound almost immediately to the immune cells in the bloodstream.
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And then we injected the cancer cells to mimic a process
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through which cancer cells spread throughout our bodies.
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And we found something very exciting.
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We found that in our treated group,
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over 75 percent of the cancer cells we initially injected were dead or dying,
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in comparison to only around 25 percent.
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So just imagine: these fewer amount of cells were available
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to actually be able to spread to a different part of the body.
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And this is only after two hours of treatment.
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Our results were amazing, and we had some pretty interesting press.
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My favorite title was actually,
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"Sticky balls may stop the spread of cancer."
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(Laughter)
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I can't tell you just how smug my male colleagues were,
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knowing that their sticky balls might one day cure cancer.
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(Laughter)
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But I can tell you they made some pretty, pretty, exciting,
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pretty ballsy t-shirts.
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This was also my first experience talking to patients
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where they asked how soon our therapy would be available.
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And I keep these stories with me to remind me of the importance
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of the science, the scientists and the patients.
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Now, our fast-acting results were pretty interesting,
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but we still had one lingering question:
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Can our sticky balls,
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our particles actually attached to the immune cells,
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actually stop the spread of cancer?
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So we went to our animal model, and we found three important parts.
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Our primary tumors were smaller in our treated animals,
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there were fewer cells in circulation,
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and there was little to no tumor burden in the distant organs.
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Now, this wasn't just a victory for us and our sticky balls.
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This was also a victory to me
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in drug delivery,
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and it represents a paradigm shift,
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a revolution --
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to go from just using drugs, just injecting them
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and hoping they go to the right places in the body,
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to using immune cells as special delivery drivers in your body.
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For this example, we used two molecules, e-selectin and trail,
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but really, the possibility of drugs you can use are endless.
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And I talked about cancer,
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but where disease goes, so do immune cells.
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So this could be used for any disease.
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Imagine using immune cells to deliver crucial wound-healing agents
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after a spinal cord injury,
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or using immune cells to deliver drugs past the blood-brain barrier
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to treat Parkinson's or Alzheimer's disease.
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These are the ideas that excite me about science the most.
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And from where I stand, I see so much promise and opportunity.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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