Helpline 07939 046 030
Freephone 0300 102 17 22*

New ways to treat NF1 tumours with existing drugs

20 April 2023

Prof. Benjamin Housden and Dr. Megan Stevens

NF1 is one of the most common inherited diseases, affecting 1/3000 people worldwide. Despite a long history of research, there is currently only one available drug used in the clinic to treat NF1 tumours, which does not always work and can cause side effects.

We are working with Nerve Tumours UK to solve this problem and find new ways to treat NF1 tumours. This research is being performed by Dr. Megan Stevens and Prof. Benjamin Housden at the Living Systems Institute, University of Exeter, UK. (www.exeter.ac.uk/research/livingsystems).

A major problem in drug discovery is that drugs found in research labs often fail when tested in people. This is either because they cause side effects and are not safe for use or they  simply don’t work as expected when tested in people. Over the past few years, we have been working on new ways to find drugs in the lab that have a higher chance of being safe and effective when used in the clinic. 

A standard way to find new treatments for disease is to grow cells from patients with that disease in the lab and test many thousands of drugs on those cells to see which produce a positive effect. In the case of NF1 tumours, we would look for drugs that kill the tumour cells but that do not kill healthy cells from the same patient. 

However, previous research has shown that drugs that work in cells in the lab do not necessarily work in people. Studying such drugs wastes a lot of time and delays the development of effective treatments. We take a different approach to find effective drugs. Instead of using human cells, we use cells from fruit flies. Fruit flies have been used for over a hundred years to study biology and many findings using these insects have resulted in new understanding of how human bodies work as well as how to treat disease. We grow fruit fly cells carrying mutations in the NF1 gene and use these to test existing drugs. At the same time, we test the drugs in healthy fruit fly cells and search for those that kill the NF1 mutant cells but have no effect on the healthy cells. Once we have found drugs that behave in this way, we move on to test them in human cells.

By using this approach, we can find drugs that work in two very different types of cells. Any drugs that only work in one type of cell are unlikely to be effective in the clinic. Our approach allows us to filter out all of the drugs that only work in some types of cell and the remaining drugs have a much higher chance of working when used in the clinic to treat NF1 patients. Our approach also involves focusing on existing drugs that are already used to treat other diseases. The advantage of this approach is that we already know these drugs are safe and so we can establish a new treatment for NF1 tumours much faster than if we were developing new drugs. 

This work is still in progress but we have already found two existing drugs that are known to be safe for use in people. Both of these drugs kill NF1 tumour cells from fruit flies but do not kill healthy cells. In addition, both drugs work the same way in tumour cells from several human patients with NF1 tumours or MPNST tumours. These exciting results highlight the clinical potential of these drugs to treat NF1 tumours in patients. 

We are now working with Nerve Tumours UK to develop these drugs towards clinical trials. From this work, we hope to bring benefit to NF1 patients in the near future by providing safe and effective treatments for NF1 tumours as well as MPNST tumours. 

We would like to thank Nerve Tumours UK for their support and funding as well as the Medical Research Council (grant: MR/ V009583/1).

Research update

Inhibition of autophagy as a novel therapy for the treatment of NF1 tumours. We generated a Drosophila cell model of Neurofibromatosis type 1 and used this to search for potential drugs to treat tumors. We show that chloroquine treatment has a clear selective effect on tumor cells across multiple cell culture and in vivo model systems.

Filter News

Filter by Date
Category
Reset

We know 26, 500 people who need your help

To expand our Specialist Neurofibromatosis Network, we need to continue raising awareness of what we do

Read More

The New National Helpline

The National Helpline is expanding to Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from early October

Read More

London Marathon 2022

Congratulations to our 2022 London Marathon runners - thank you from the NTUK team

Read More

Hannah’s NF1 story

9 year old Hannah is running the Junior Great North Run, so other children with NF can also have access to doctors & nurses

Read More

Great North Run 2022

Great North Run 2023 - check out some of our runners' photos

Read More

Sam’s Marathon

Sam, our Specialist NF Nurse for Merseyside & the North West, is running the London Marathon - her very first Marathon!

Read More

NF Patients Community Day

The NF Patients Community Day is on Sunday 9th October 2022 - register to attend virtually

Read More

Appearance, Identity & Law workshop

Appearance, identity & law workshop at Queen Mary University London School of Law

Read More

Alfred the Pirate

Seven year old Alfred the Pirate takes NF1 in his stride, and is supported by Specialist NF Nurse Mel

Read More

Masterclasses in NF: Constitutional Mismatch Repair Deficiency Syndrome as Differential Diagnosis to NF1/Legius Syndrome - Prof. Dr. Katharina Wimmer

Constitutional Mismatch Repair Deficiency Syndrome as Differential Diagnosis to NF1/Legius Syndrome

Prof. Dr. Katharina Wimmer, Medical University of Innsbruck

Masterclasses in NF: Rare NF1-Associated Tumors in Adults - Eric Legius & Prof. Ellen Denayer

Masterclasses in NF: Rare NF1-Associated Tumors in Adults

Eric Legius, MD, PhD, University Hospital Leuven

Prof. Ellen Denayer, University Hospital Leuven

Masterclasses in NF: Optimising Hearing Outcomes in NF2-Related Schwannomatosis - Simon Freeman

Masterclasses in NF: Optimising Hearing Outcomes in NF2-Related Schwannomatosis

Simon Freeman, MPhil FRCS, Manchester Royal Infirmary and Salford Royal Hospital

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Dermatological Manifestations - Pierre Wolkenstein, Laura Fertitta & Sirkku Peltonen

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Dermatological Manifestations

Pierre Wolkenstein, MD, PhD, Hopital Henri-Mondor, Paris, France

Laura Fertitta, MD, Hôpital Universitaire Henri Mondor

Sirkku Peltonen, MD, PhD, University of Gothenberg, Sweden

Masterclasses in NF: Breast Cancer in NF1 - Gareth Evans

Masterclasses in NF: Breast Cancer in NF1

Gareth Evans, MD, University of Manchester, UK

Masterclasses in NF: Pain in Non-NF2-Related Schwannomatosis - David Pang

Masterclasses in NF: Pain in Non-NF2-Related Schwannomatosis

David Pang, MD, ChB. Guys and St Thomas' Hospital NHS Trust, London

Masterclasses in NF: Distinguishing Non-NF2-Related from NF2-Related Schwannomatosis - Clinical and Genetic Approaches - Said Farschtschi

Masterclasses in NF: Distinguishing Non-NF2-Related from NF2-Related Schwannomatosis - Clinical and Genetic Approaches

Said Farschtschi, MD, University Medical Center, Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Pre-Implantation Genetic Diagnosis - Eric Legius & Prof. Ellen Denayer

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Pre-Implantation Genetic Diagnosis

Eric Legius, MD, PHD, University Hospital of Leuven, Belgium

Prof. Ellen Denayer, University Hospital of Leuven, Belgium

NF2 Working Together: from a tentative diagnosis and beyond

Understanding the impact that a tentative diagnosis has on a parent. Information and access to the existing NTUK and Specialist Nerve Tumours medical and non medical care network.

NF1 Working Together Part 2: from a tentative diagnosis and beyond

Understanding the impact that a tentative diagnosis has on a parent. Information and access to the existing NTUK and Specialist Nerve Tumours medical and non medical care network.

NF1 Working Together Part 1: from a tentative diagnosis and beyond

Understanding  the impact that a tentative diagnosis has on a parent. Information and access to the existing NTUK and Specialist Nerve Tumours medical and non medical care network.

Masterclasses in NF: Surgery in NF2 - Michel Kalamarides & Andrew King

Masterclasses in NF: Surgery in NF2

Michel Kalamarides, MD, PhD, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France

Prof Andrew King, MBBS FRCS FRCS(SN), Salford Royal Hospital, Manchester, United Kingdom. Member of the MAB of Nerve Tumours UK

Masterclasses in NF: Cognition and Behaviour in NF1: Phenotype and Treatment Approaches - Shruti Garg, Andre Rietman

Masterclasses in NF: Cognition and Behaviour in NF1: Phenotype and Treatment Approaches

Dr Shruti Garg, MBBS, MRCPsych, MMedSci, PhD, Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, United Kingdom. Member of the MAB of Nerve Tumours UK

Andre Rietman, PhD, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands

Masterclasses in NF: Emotional Challenges in NF1, NF2 and Schwannomatosis - Susie Henley, Thomas Pletschko & Verena Rosenmayr

Masterclasses in NF: Emotional Challenges in NF1, NF2 and Schwannomatosis

Susie Henley, DClinPsy, PhD, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London UK

Thomas Pletschko, PhD, Medical University of Vienna, Austria

Verena Rosenmayr, Clinical Psychologist, Medical University of Vienna, Austria

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Pediatric Management - Rianne Oostenbrink

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Pediatric Management

Rianne Oostenbrink, MD, PhD, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands

Masterclasses in NF: Associated Glioma in Children - the Optic Pathway and Beyond - Amedeo Azizi

Masterclasses in NF: Associated Glioma in Children - the Optic Pathway and Beyond

Amedeo Azizi, MD, PhD, Head of the Paediatric Neurofibromatosis Program and Paediatric Neuro-Oncology Program, Medical University of Vienna, Austria

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Orthopedic Manifestations - Eric Legius and Christophe Glorion

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Orthopedic Manifestations

Eric Legius, MD, PhD. Head of Clinical Genetics Department of the University Hospital Leuven, Belgium

Christophe Glorion, MD, PhD, Department of Paediatric Orthopedic and Traumatologic Surgery, Hopital Necker-Enfants Malades, Paris, France. 

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumours - Rosalie Ferner and Viktor-Felix Mautner

Masterclasses in NF: NF1 Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumours

Prof Rosalie Ferner, Consultant Neurologist and Lead Clinician for Neurofibromatosis, Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London. Member of the MAB of Nerve Tumours UK and Trustee of Nerve Tumours UK

Viktor-Felix Mautner, MD, PhD. University Medical Centre in Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany. Head of NF Outpatient Department

Masterclasses in NF - Neurofibromatosis Type 1: Cutaneous Neurofibromas - Pierre Wolkenstein and Sirkku Peltonen

Masterclasses in NF - Neurofibromatosis Type 1: Cutaneous Neurofibromas

Pierre Wolkenstein, MD, PhD. Hopital Henri-Mondor, Paris, France. Head of the Department of Dermatology

Sirkku Peltonen MD, PhD. University of Gothenberg, Sweden. Professor of Dermatology

INFER (International NF Educational Resources) is a series of online educational lectures for medical professionals by leading neurofibromatosis experts. The Masterclasses take place online approximately once a month, each on a different topic, and include real-time interaction between the expert presenter and the participants. The presentations are conducted in English, with real-time audio interpretation available in 6 additional languages: French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish. A recording of each INFER masterclass is then be made available online in each language for those who could not attend an event. INFER is an initiative of Children’s Tumor Foundation Europe, supported by an educational grant from AstraZeneca. https://ctfeurope.org/research/masterclasses-in-nf

BPNA Keynote Lecture - Prof Rosalie Ferner - Neurofibromatosis 1 in the 21st Century

‘Neurofibromatosis 1 in the 21st Century’

Keynote Lecture at the 48th British Paediatric Neurology Association Annual Scientific Meeting on 21st January 2022

Prof Rosalie Ferner, Consultant Neurologist and Lead Clinician for Neurofibromatosis, Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London. Member of the MAB of Nerve Tumours UK and Trustee of Nerve Tumours UK