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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Therapeutic modulation of a proteomic HCC risk signature with statins in patients with liver cirrhosis

$3.67M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Ut Southwestern Medical Center
Country United States
Start Date Sep 25, 2023
End Date Aug 31, 2027
Duration 1,436 days
Number of Grantees 4
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10853142
Grant Description

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major cirrhosis complication producing an alarming rise in mortality. The prognosis for HCC is poor due to extremely high recurrence rate even after curative-intent surgical therapies and limited efficacy of available medical therapies. Given its refractory nature, prevention of HCC in cirrhosis patients

will be the most impactful strategy to improve its poor prognosis; however, effective HCC prevention remains a major unmet need. Retrospective and pre-clinical studies have suggested that statins are a viable form of HCC chemoprevention, with a differential effect between lipophilic and hydrophilic statins. Further evidence suggests

that statins may modulate HCC risk through Hedgehog and Hippo signaling pathways. However, the clinical validation of statins has been hampered by the requirement for large and lengthy clinical trials to define their clinical utility. To overcome these challenges, we have developed a serum-based HCC risk biomarker, the

Prognostic Liver Secretome signature (PLSec). Of note, PLSec is therapeutically modifiable and the magnitude of PLSec modulation is associated with future HCC incidence as demonstrated by our previous and preliminary studies. In a retrospective case-control series, PLSec-based HCC risk level was lower in cirrhosis patients on

statins compared to non-users. Based on these observations, PLSec is now being tested as a surrogate endpoint in HCC chemoprevention trials of atorvastatin (TORCH trial). To achieve the goal of establishing statins as viable HCC chemoprevention with PLSec as a surrogate endpoint, we have assembled a team of cirrhosis and HCC

experts to analyze serum samples from three nation-wide multi-center prospective cohorts (Liver Cirrhosis Network, Southern Liver Health Study, and Mass General Brigham cohorts) and two randomized controlled trials (TORCH and LCN RESCU trials). Aim 1. Validate lower biomarker-based HCC risk level in cirrhosis patients on

statins compared to non-users. We will validate our preliminary finding in prospective case-control series of cirrhosis patients form the three cohorts. We will explore patient characteristics and types of statins associated with the PLSec-based HCC risk level, along with mechanistic markers of Hedgehog/Hippo signaling. Aim 2.

Determine magnitude of biomarker-based HCC risk modulation after starting or stopping statins. We will conduct target trial emulation mimicking single-arm clinical trials with statins to determine the magnitude of PLSec modulation in patients who start or stop statins from three cohorts. We will explore patient characteristics and

types of statins associated with PLSec-based HCC risk modulation, along with mechanistic markers. Aim 3. Compare biomarker-based HCC risk modulation between lipophilic and hydrophilic statins. We will compare the magnitude of placebo-adjusted PLSec modulation between lipophilic (atorvastatin) and hydrophilic (rosuvastatin)

statins by analyzing serum samples from two parallel randomized clinical trials. We will explore patient characteristics associated with differential PLSec modulation, along with mechanistic markers. Our strategy showcases a novel approach to substantially advance clinical translation of HCC chemoprevention therapies.

All Grantees

Ut Southwestern Medical Center

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