Affiliation:
1. Experimental Clinical Oncology-Department of Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, DK-8200 Aarhus, Denmark
Abstract
This pre-clinical study was designed to demonstrate how vascular disrupting agents (VDAs) should be administered, either alone or when combined with radiation in clinically relevant fractionated radiation schedules, for the optimal anti-tumor effect. CDF1 mice, implanted in the right rear foot with a 200 mm3 murine C3H mammary carcinoma, were injected with various doses of the most potent VDA drug, combretastatin A-1 phosphate (CA1P), under different schedules. Tumors were also locally irradiated with single-dose, or stereotactic (3 × 5–20 Gy) or conventional (30 × 2 Gy) fractionation schedules. Tumor growth and control were the endpoints used. Untreated tumors had a tumor growth time (TGT5; time to grow to 5 times the original treatment volume) of around 6 days. This increased with increasing drug doses (5–100 mg/kg). However, with single-drug treatments, the maximum TGT5 was only 10 days, yet this increased to 19 days when injecting the drug on a weekly basis or as three treatments in one week. CA1P enhanced radiation response regardless of the schedule or interval between the VDA and radiation. There was a dose-dependent increase in radiation response when the combined with a single, stereotactic, or conventional fractionated irradiation, but these enhancements plateaued at around a drug dose of 25 mg/kg. This pre-clinical study demonstrated how VDAs should be combined with clinically applicable fractionated radiation schedules for the optimal anti-tumor effect, thus suggesting the necessary pre-clinical testing required to ultimately establish VDAs in clinical practice.
Funder
Danish Cancer Society
Danish Council for Independent Research: Medical Sciences
Reference49 articles.
1. Tumor angiogenesis: Therapeutic implications;Folkman;N. Engl. J. Med.,1971
2. Prolonged tumor dormancy by prevention of neo-vascularization in the vitreous;Brem;Cancer Res.,1976
3. Tumor development under angiogenic signalling: A dynamic theory of tumor growth, treatment response, and postvascular dormancy;Hahnfeldt;Cancer Res.,1999
4. Tumorigenesis and the angiogenic switch;Bergers;Nat. Rev. Cancer,2003
5. Review article: Angiogenesis, neovascular proliferation and vascular pathophysiology as targets for cancer therapy;Denekamp;Br. J. Radiol.,1993