We have reported earlier a novel combination of four structurally designed synthetic neuropeptide analogs of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), bombesin, substance P and somatostatin, code-named DRF 7295 which have anti-tumor efficacy for adenocarcinomas in vitro and in vivo (Jaggi et al., Invest New Drugs, 2008). The discovery, synthesis, in vitro and in vivo efficacy was reported (Jaggi et al., Invest New Drugs, 2008). Gastrointestinal tumor cells of the colon, pancreas and duodenum were found to most sensitive to DRF7295 in vitro and in vivo (Jaggi et al., Invest New Drugs, 2008). We have further investigated and report here the modulation of cellular signaling in gastrointestinal carcinomas by DRF 7295, which may be mediating its observed anticancer activity in these cancer types. DRF 7295 inhibits the binding of specific neuropeptides initiating a cascade of cellular signaling events leading to programmed cell death. It down regulates the second messenger cAMP, epidermal growth factor (EGF) dependent proliferation and the phosphorylated MAP Kinase pERK1/2 in gastrointestinal carcinomas, thus depriving the tumour cells of critical pro-proliferative cellular signals. It triggers bcl2 and Caspase 3 dependent apoptotic cell death and induces p53 tumor suppressor protein in the treated carcinoma cells in vitro. It has significant anti-angiogenic potential as reflected in the inhibition of tube like formation in the endothelial cells and down regulation of VEGF levels. Tumour xenograft studies confirmed the in vivo efficacy of DRF 7295 for gastrointestinal carcinomas (Jaggi et al., Invest New Drugs, 2008). The Phase I clinical trials have shown DRF 7295 to be well tolerated and devoid of systemic toxicities of the conventional cytotoxics (Mukherjee et al., Phase I dose escalating study of DRF7295: a new class of peptide based drugs. "Abstract" ASCO ID:948, 2003). The drug may have a promising role in disease stabilization in colorectal and other cancers. Thus DRF 7295 is a novel targeted drug in the class of signal transduction modulators, with potential for treatment of gastrointestinal carcinomas.