Bladder Cancer Discovery
Bladder Cancer Discovery Opens Door to New and Better Treatments. Lack of Protein Found to Speed Progression, Spread of Disease
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Feb. 11, 2013 – A mysterious molecule some scientists thought might speed the development of bladder cancer actually suppresses tumor growth, new research at the University of Virginia School of Medicine shows. The discovery offers new understanding of the development of cancers in the urinary bladder, ovaries and elsewhere, and the findings point to potential new cancer therapies that would restore the protein where it’s missing.
Controlling Cancer Metastasis
The protein, known as SPARC (secreted protein acidic and rich in
cysteine), acts as a tumor growth regulator in many cancers. In bladder
cancer, the question was whether SPARC was promoting tumor growth or
slowing it. The new study determined that SPARC not only slowed the
development and spread of bladder cancer, but also stopped the ability
of tumors to make new blood vessels and prevented invasive and
migrating cancer cells from attaching to prospective sites of distant
metastasis.
Importantly, the study revealed that in less aggressive bladder tumors, SPARC is made by both cancer cells and the surrounding non-cancerous tissue and is associated with longer patient survival. In aggressive tumors, SPARC is diminished or lost in cancer cells while still made in the surrounding tissues and is associated with poor patient survival.
Charting Cancer’s Course
The distinct pattern of SPARC expression could explain previous
observations of high SPARC in aggressive tumors that implied a possible
tumor-promoting role of the protein. The UVA study revealed that
growing tumors lose SPARC while the surrounding healthy tissues respond
by increasing SPARC production to restrain tumor progression. Using
model systems, the UVA research shows that growing tumors “inflame”
surrounding healthy tissues, which reciprocate by increasing SPARC to
stop the tumor. In essence, SPARC acts as an anti-inflammatory,
attempting to heal inflammation instigated by tumors. This correlation
could prove extremely important, as the level and pattern of SPARC
expression could offer doctors a way to gauge the progression
and aggressiveness of the disease in patients.
“My aim is to identify whether SPARC can be restored in tumors that
aren’t expressing it, and to identify how it synergizes with
standard-of-care chemotherapy and radiation therapy, so we know when,
exactly, to administer these particular treatment regimens,” says UVA
researcher Neveen Said, MD, PhD, the lead author of the study. “That
way we start with the right treatment for the right patient.”
She adds: “The new research is believed to be the first comprehensive
study combining patient data with experimental models to address
different angles of the bladder cancer initiation, progression and
metastasis.”
Breakthrough Described
The findings have been published in the February issue The Journal
of Clinical Investigation online and in print. The article is
authored by Neveen Said of UVA’s Department of Radiation Oncology;
Marta Sanchez-Carbayo of the Spanish National Cancer Institute in
Madrid; Henry F. Frierson of UVA’s Department of Pathology; Marta
Sanchez-Carbayo of the Spanish National Cancer Institute in Madrid,
Spain; Rolf A. Brekken of the Department of Surgery at the University
Texas Southwestern, in Dallas; and Dan Theodorescu, a former UVA
researcher who now leads the University of Colorado Comprehensive
Cancer Center.

