ADM Korea Announces Niclosamide-based Metabolic Anticancer Drug's First Clinical Trial Target as 'Prostate Cancer Patients Resistant to Hormone Therapy'

In This Article:

  • IND for clinical study for combination therapy with hormone therapy in prostate cancer patients to be submitted in August, 2024.

  • Niclosamide-based metabolic anticancer drug aims to block signaling pathways that allow cancer cells to evade anticancer effects, potentially solving the issue of drug resistance.

SEOUL, South Korea, July 11, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- ADM Korea, a subsidiary of Hyundai Bioscience, announced on the 8th that the first clinical trial target population for its niclosamide-based oral metabolic anticancer drug will be 'prostate cancer patients resistant to hormone therapy.'

ADM Korea
ADM Korea

Metabolic anticancer drugs regulate the metabolic pathways of cancer cells to induce their death. The niclosamide-based metabolic anticancer drug not only regulates the metabolic pathways of cancer cells to induce their death but also blocks the signaling pathways of cancer cells that avoid anticancer effects, thus inhibiting drug resistance.

Currently used anticancer drugs, including hormone therapies, chemotherapies, targeted therapies, and immunotherapies, all fail to resolve the issue of cancer cell drug resistance that arises with long-term treatment. Cancer cell resistance refers to the phenomenon where cancer cells activate cell signaling pathways that help them evade the effects of anticancer agents through repeated drug administration, thereby decreasing the efficacy of the drugs. The biggest challenge in anti-cancer treatment is solving the problem of cancer cell drug resistance, but no drug has yet been developed to address this.

Niclosamide is a drug that has been identified to inhibit the Wnt/β-catenin and STAT3 cell signaling pathways, which are activated when cancer cells develop resistance to anticancer drugs, thereby suppressing cancer cell drug resistance. Numerous studies have shown that when niclosamide is used in combination with chemotherapies (such as SN38 and azacitidine), immunotherapies (PD-L1 Ab), targeted therapies (erlotinib), and hormone therapies (enzalutamide), the anticancer effects are superior to those of single-agent treatments. However, due to the longstanding issues of low absorption and short half-life, niclosamide has not been repurposed as an anticancer drug over the past 60 years.

CNPharm, which plans to enter into an exclusive license agreement with ADM Korea, has overcome these two issues with its patented technology, successfully repurposing niclosamide as an oral metabolic anticancer drug.

In a triple-negative breast cancer model animal study conducted by CNPharm, the combination treatment of the chemotherapeutic agent docetaxel and the niclosamide-based metabolic anticancer drug showed 67% greater anticancer effects compared to the docetaxel-only treatment group. Additionally, in a three-month animal toxicity study of the oral niclosamide-based metabolic anticancer drug, the blood concentration at the NOAEL (No Observable Adverse Effect Level) of niclosamide was 7,888 ng/mL, and cancer cell proliferation was found to be reduced by 50% at a concentration of less than one-tenth of NOAEL level (65~654 ng/mL) in in vitro study, confirming the drug's safety. The niclosamide-based drug is an oral medication offering convenience and ease of administration.