Zubrod's initiatives In 1956,
C. Gordon Zubrod, who had formerly led the development of antimalarial agents for the United States Army, took over the Division of Cancer Treatment of the NCI and guided development of new drugs. In the two decades that followed the establishment of the NCCSC, a large network of cooperative clinical trial groups evolved under the auspices of the NCI to test anticancer agents. Zubrod had a particular interest in natural products, and established a broad programme for collecting and testing plant and marine sources, a controversial programme that led to the discovery of taxanes (in 1964) and camptothecins (in 1966). Both classes of drug were isolated and characterized by the laboratory of
Monroe Wall at the
Research Triangle Institute.
Taxanes Paclitaxel (Taxol) was a novel antimitotic agent that promoted
microtubule assembly. This agent proved difficult to synthesize and could only be obtained from the bark of the
Pacific Yew tree, which forced the NCI into the costly business of harvesting substantial quantities of yew trees from public lands. After 4 years of clinical testing in solid tumours, it was found in 1987 (23 years after its initial discovery) to be effective in
ovarian cancer therapy. Notably, this agent, although developed by the NCI in partnership with
Bristol-Myers Squibb, was exclusively marketed by BMS (who had utilized the synthetic methodology developed by Robert Holton at Florida State University) who went on to make over a billion dollars profit from Taxol.
Camptothecins Another drug class originating from the NCI was the camptothecins.
Camptothecin, derived from a Chinese ornamental tree, inhibits
topoisomerase I, an enzyme that allows DNA unwinding. Despite showing promise in preclinical studies, the agent had little antitumour activity in early clinical trials, and dosing was limited by
kidney toxicity: its lactone ring is unstable at neutral pH, so while in the acidic environment of the kidneys it becomes active, damaging the renal tubules. In 1996 a more stable analogue,
irinotecan, won
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the treatment of colon cancer. Later, this agent would also be used to treat lung and ovarian cancers.
Platinum-based agents Cisplatin, a
platinum-based compound, was discovered by a
Michigan State University researcher,
Barnett Rosenberg, working under an NCI contract. This was yet another
serendipitous discovery: Rosenberg had initially wanted to explore the possible effects of an electric field on the growth of bacteria. He observed that the bacteria unexpectedly ceased to divide when placed in an electric field. Excited, he spent months of testing to try to explain this phenomenon. He was disappointed to find that the cause was an experimental
artifact — the inhibition of bacterial division was pinpointed to an
electrolysis product of the platinum
electrode rather than the electrical field. This accidental discovery, however, soon initiated a series of investigations and studies into the effects of platinum compounds on cell division, culminating in the synthesis of cisplatin. This drug was pivotal in the cure of
testicular cancer. Subsequently,
Eve Wiltshaw and others at the
Institute of Cancer Research in the United Kingdom extended the clinical usefulness of the platinum compounds with their development of
carboplatin, a cisplatin derivative with broad antitumour activity and comparatively less nephrotoxicity.
Nitrosoureas A second group with an NCI contract, led by John Montgomery at the
Southern Research Institute, synthesized
nitrosoureas, an
alkylating agent which cross-links DNA.
Fludarabine phosphate, a purine analogue which has become a mainstay in treatment of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, was another similar development by Montgomery.
Anthracyclines and epipodophyllotoxins Other effective molecules also came from industry during the period of 1970 to 1990, including
anthracyclines and
epipodophyllotoxins — both of which inhibited the action of
topoisomerase II, an
enzyme crucial for
DNA synthesis. ==Supportive care during chemotherapy==