July 28th 2025

EARA News Digest 2025 - Week 31


Welcome to your Monday morning update, from EARA, on the latest news in biomedical science, policy and openness on animal research. 

This week: Animal research paved the way for a precision treatment for pancreatic cancer; Solutions for cardiovascular disease from mice gut bacteriaMice study breakthrough in cancer CAR-T cell therapy.

Animal research paved the way for a precision treatment for pancreatic cancer

A clinical trial in the UK will test for the first time a precision therapy for pancreatic cancer, which is one of the deadliest cancers and for which treatments have remained largely unchanged for decades.   

Precision medicine uses the genetic characteristics of a patient’s tumour to define the treatments, improving outcomes and reducing side effects. These advances have been made possible due to decades of basic and translational research, including research in animals that allowed the development of strategies to tackle cancer. 

The PemOla trial at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge combines two drugs – pembrolizumab, an immunotherapy for cancer, and olaparib, already used as a treatment for tumours with changes in the BRCA genes. These genes, known for their role in breast and ovarian cancer, are also linked to an increased risk of other cancers, such as pancreatic cancer, prostate cancer and melanoma.  

Pembrolizumab is widely used to treat several cancer types. It was first studied in humanised mice – mice that mimic human immune responses to cancer – and was shown to help the immune system to recognise and attack cancer cells. Olaparib was first developed for ovarian, breast and colorectal cancers, but it has since been shown to be effective in other cancers, including pancreatic cancer. It was originally tested in mice, where it was shown to kill cancer cells by preventing the repair of DNA damage.  

“Pancreatic cancer remains one of the hardest cancers to treat with very few available treatment options,” said Dr Pippa Corrie, oncologist and leader of the trial. “For the first time we’re taking a precision immunology approach to treatment, which we hope will have a transformative effect for the patients that are able to benefit.”  

 

 

Solutions for cardiovascular disease from mice gut bacteria

Researchers in Spain identified a molecule produced by bacteria in the gut that could aid in the early diagnosis and treatment of atherosclerosis, a type of cardiovascular disease. 

Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of deaths in the world. Atherosclerosis, which occurs when arteries become hard and narrow due to inflammation and accumulation of fat deposits, is responsible for most heart attacks and strokes. Researchers at CNIC found that the blood of mice and humans with the disease had high levels of ImP, a molecule produced by bacteria in the gut.  

This discovery could improve early diagnosis of atherosclerosis, which now relies on costly and complex imaging tools. Although doctors use risk factors such as high cholesterol, hypertension and smoking as indicators, the disease is often overlooked since people can appear healthy. 

“We may soon be able to analyse blood for ImP as an early warning signal.” said David Sancho, leader of the study published in Nature

The researchers also discovered that when the molecule was given to mice in their drinking water, the animals had more inflammation in general and developed atherosclerosis. This suggests that ImP may contribute as a cause of the disease and could be used to develop new treatments. The team is now working on developing drugs that could block the negative effects of the molecule.  

 

 

Mice study breakthrough in cancer CAR-T cell therapy    

Researchers in the US have been able to safely generate CAR-T cells within the body of mice, possibly solving major limitations of this therapy, which revolutionised the treatment of many blood cancers. 

CAR-T cell therapy requires that a patient’s own T cells – a type of immune cell – are collected from the body, genetically altered to detect and kill cancer cells and returned to the patient. This is a week’s long process that is labour-intensive and expensive. 

Researchers at Stanford Medicine, California, took advantage of the same technique used for mRNA-based vaccines to generate CAR-T cells in mice directly. 

The researchers created tiny soluble bubbles, called nanoparticles, with an antibody on their surface that made them attach specifically to T cells, delivering instructions for the T cells to find and kill B cells, which grow uncontrollably in many blood cancers.  

These nanoparticles, when injected into mice with a type of B cell blood cancer, were able to generate internally a similar number of CAR-T cells to the one administered to patients undergoing the conventional therapy. These cells were also able to travel to the tumours. Six out of eight mice were tumour-free after 60 days of treatment and tumour growth was controlled in the remaining two. 

"The combination of safety and efficacy we've seen in the mice is impressive," said Katherine Ferrara, leader of the study published in PNAS.  

Conventional CAR-T cell treatment requires that the patients undergo a process to reduce the number of remaining T cells, which increases the efficacy of the therapy but makes them susceptible to infections. This new strategy does not require this procedure, possibly making CAR-T cell therapy not only cheaper, faster and available to a greater number of patients, but also safer. 

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