Literature DB >> 11385959

A pilot trial of Vitaxin, a humanized anti-vitronectin receptor (anti alpha v beta 3) antibody in patients with metastatic cancer.

J A Posey1, M B Khazaeli, A DelGrosso, M N Saleh, C Y Lin, W Huse, A F LoBuglio.   

Abstract

The angiogenic response of a progressing malignancy is characterized by a shift in the balance of stimulatory and inhibiting factors of angiogenesis. Recognition of the regulated steps in tumor angiogenesis provides unique targets for developing anti-tumor therapy. Vitaxin is a humanized monoclonal antibody, which has specificity for the integrin alpha v beta 3 (vitronectin receptor). This antibody can impair the vascular response of endothelial cell growth factors in vitro and inhibit tumor cell mediated angiogenesis in pre-clinical animal models. Patients with metastatic cancer who failed standard therapy received intravenous doses of 10, 50 or 200 mg in cohorts of three patients. The unlabeled dose of Vitaxin was infused on days 0 and 21 of a treatment cycle. All patients received a pre-therapy imaging dose of 1 mg of Tc-99m Vitaxin with gamma camera imaging studies. There was no significant toxicity noted in these three dose levels. There were no objective anti-tumor responses. Three patients received two cycles of therapy and had stable disease at day 85 when taken off study. Radioimaging of tumor vasculature was unsuccessful although one patient with alpha v beta 3 positive melanoma had imaging of tumor sites. There was no immune response to Vitaxin in any patient. Patients receiving 10 mg doses of Vitaxin had poor plasma recovery of injected doses and brief circulation in plasma. Doses of 50 and 200 mg had plasma recovery that better approximated the predicted levels in plasma and circulation half-lives of approximately 7 days. This data suggests that an every three-week schedule of Vitaxin at doses of 200 mg (2.5-3.5 mg/kg) can maintain circulating levels of antibody with little or no toxicity. Future studies will be challenged to define anti-tumor activity in malignancy or appropriate surrogates of anti-tumor effect and explore escalating doses and alternate schedules of administration.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11385959     DOI: 10.1089/108497801300189218

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Biother Radiopharm        ISSN: 1084-9785            Impact factor:   3.099


  32 in total

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2.  Specific targeting of human integrin α(v)β (3) with (111)In-labeled Abegrin™ in nude mouse models.

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4.  Integrin targeted therapeutics.

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5.  Integrin alpha(v)beta(3)-Targeted Cancer Therapy.

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6.  Synthesis and biological evaluation of RGD conjugated with Ketoprofen/Naproxen and radiolabeled with [99mTc] via N4(GGAG) for αVβ3 integrin-targeted drug delivery.

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7.  Differential regulation of monocyte cytokine release by αV and β(2) integrins that bind CD23.

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Review 8.  Development of Peritoneal Carcinomatosis in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: A Review.

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Journal:  J Histochem Cytochem       Date:  2017-11-22       Impact factor: 2.479

Review 9.  Tumor stroma as targets for cancer therapy.

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Journal:  Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2012-10-12       Impact factor: 12.310

10.  Tumor angiogenesis: insights and innovations.

Authors:  Fernando Nussenbaum; Ira M Herman
Journal:  J Oncol       Date:  2010-04-26       Impact factor: 4.375

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