Experimental drug doubles one-year survival in pancreatic cancer

An experimental treatment has doubled one-year survival rates for pancreatic cancer, one of the deadliest types of cancer, a new study reports.

The drug, called elraglusib, targets the protective web that pancreatic tumors build around themselves, thus helping immune molecules and chemotherapy better penetrate the tumors. The results of the trial showing elraglusib's safety and efficacy were published April 14 in the journal Nature Medicine.

You may like illustration of a tumor, shown in red, growing on a pancreas, depicted in blue New triple-drug treatment stops pancreatic cancer in its tracks, a mouse study finds illustration of nanoparticles that make up a cancer vaccine. each spherical particle has skinny bits of protein sticking off its surface Cancer vaccine shows promise against HPV-related throat tumors in early study Unrecognizable middle-aged woman preparing an insulin pen to inject herself with a dose. Cheap, decades-old transplant drug delays full onset of type 1 diabetes

Pancreatic cancer has one of the poorest prognoses of all cancers, with patients who are newly diagnosed having only a 13% chance of surviving five years with the disease. Often, the problem is that pancreatic cancer is not detected until it has progressed substantially,

"Most patients, unfortunately, present with advanced disease," Mahalingam told Live Science. "There are no screening tools to pick things up earlier."

In addition, the region surrounding the tumor, called the tumor microenvironment, poses problems for pancreatic cancer treatment. "It's very dense and fibrous," he said, which reduces the effectiveness of typical treatments for the condition, like chemotherapy.

Elraglusib addresses this problem by suppressing a protein called glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta (GSK-3 beta).

Petri-dish studies had previously shown that GSK-3 beta helps keep pancreatic cancer cells alive by boosting the activity of a protein called nuclear factor κB, which helps pancreatic cells resist programmed cell death — essentially a cellular "self destruct" button. The drug also suppresses molecules that make the tumors resistant to the immune system.

elraglusib was safe for patients with a range of cancers, but to see whether it improved pancreatic cancer outcomes, Mahalingam and his colleagues tested the drug in 286 people who had been recently diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. The patients received chemotherapy with or without elraglusib. Nearly all of the patients in the trial had advanced, metastatic disease, meaning the cancer had spread to other parts of the body beyond the pancreas.

Half of the patients given elraglusib and chemotherapy were still alive after 10.1 months, while half of the patients given chemotherapy alone were still alive after 7.2 months. Of the patients given elraglusib, 42% lived a year after their diagnosis, compared with 22% of those who received only chemotherapy.

What to read next Nurse taking a mammogram exam to an adult patient at the hospital AI-supported breast cancer screening spots more cancers earlier, landmark trial finds A close up of the pancreas, where purple and pink stained cells can be seen with dark dots for their nucleii Scientists cured type 1 diabetes in mice by creating a blended immune system On the left is an image of a Zapotec tomb engraving. On the right a man stands among floating virtual text bubbles. AI swarms, mysterious Zapotec tomb, pancreatic cancer breakthrough and the growing threat of U.S. dam collapses.

It's never easy to develop a drug from an academic institution. It's nice to see some that come true.

Dr. Devalingam Mahalingam, oncologist at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

Although elraglusib increased overall survival time, it didn't lengthen the amount of time that patients lived without their cancer growing or spreading to new areas.

The trial's protocol required patients to stop receiving treatment if their disease progressed, and Mahalingam said the trial's extremely sick cohort meant the chances of progression were high. As a result, some patients were switched to palliative care before the drug's effects became obvious. These patients may have lived longer if they had stayed on the trial and received more doses of the drug, Mahalingam speculated.

lab-dish experiments and animal testing, elraglusib also made the environment surrounding the tumor more permeable to immune cells and chemotherapy, and it reduced tumor cells' ability to fight off immune cells once they infiltrated the tumor.

These abilities, combined with the drug's safety, could make it a useful complement to other pancreatic cancer therapies, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors, which enhance the immune system’s ability to recognize and kill tumor cells, or KRAS inhibitors, which stop mutant proteins that drive tumor growth, Mahalingam said.

Elraglusib could potentially treat other types of cancer in combination with chemotherapy, Mahalingam noted. A decade ago, other GSK-3 beta-targeting drugs were tested against other solid tumor cancers but never made it past the early stages of clinical testing. But therapeutic doses of those drugs didn't reach the tumors — an obstacle elraglusib has overcome, Mahalingam said.

The new study is also notable because the drug was developed without the involvement of large pharmaceutical companies.

"It's never easy to develop a drug from an academic institution," he added. "It's nice to see some that come true."

This article is for informational purposes only and is not meant to offer medical advice.

Mahalingam, D., Shroff, R. T., Carneiro, B. A., Ji, Y., Coveler, A. L., Cervantes, A., Sahai, V., Ploquin, A., Hiret, S., LoConte, N. K., Percent, I. J., Lopez, C. D., Pernot, S., Kavan, P., Mulcahy, M., Carr, R., Giles, F. J., Seifarth, C., Ugolkov, A., . . . Bekaii-Saab, T. S. (2026). Elraglusib and chemotherapy in metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: a randomized controlled phase 2 trial. Nature Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-026-04327-4

Comments (0)

AI Article