| Literature DB >> 12610519 |
B van Etten1, M R de Vries, M G A van IJken, T E Lans, G Guetens, G Ambagtsheer, S T van Tiel, G de Boeck, E A de Bruijn, A M M Eggermont, T L M ten Hagen.
Abstract
Isolated hepatic perfusion (IHP) with melphalan with or without tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is currently performed in clinical trials in patients with hepatic metastases. Previous studies led to the hypothesis that the use of TNF-alpha in isolated limb perfusion causes specific destruction of tumour endothelial cells and thereby induces an increased permeability of tumour vasculature. However, whether TNF-alpha contributes to the therapeutic efficacy in IHP still remains unclear. In an in vivo rat liver metastases model we studied three different tumours: colon carcinoma CC531, ROS-1 osteosarcoma and BN-175 soft-tissue sarcoma which exhibit different degrees of vascularisation. IHP was performed with melphalan with or without the addition of TNF-alpha. IHP with melphalan alone resulted, in all tumour types, in a decreased growth rate. However in the BN-175 tumour addition of TNF-alpha resulted in a strong synergistic effect. In the majority of the BN-175 tumour-bearing rats, a complete response was achieved. In vitro cytoxicity studies showed no sensitivity (CC531 and BN-175) or only minor sensitivity (ROS-1) to TNF-alpha, ruling out a direct interaction of TNF-alpha with tumour cells. The response rate in BN-175 tumour-bearing rats when TNF-alpha was coadministrated with melphalan was strongly correlated with drug accumulation in tumour tissue, as only in these rats a five-fold increased melphalan concentration was observed. Secondly, immunohistochemical analysis of microvascular density (MVD) of the tumour showed a significantly higher MVD for BN-175 tumour compared to CC531 and ROS-1. These results indicate a direct relation between vascularity of the tumour and TNF-alpha mediated effects. Assessment of the tumour vasculature of liver metastases would be a way of establishing an indication for the utility of TNF-alpha in this setting.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12610519 PMCID: PMC2377047 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6600707
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Schematic representation of an IHP.
Figure 2Growth curves of in vivo tumours after IHP. Each group contained at least six animals. Mean values (±s.e.m.) are shown; (A) CC531, (B) ROS-1, (C) BN-175.
Figure 3In vitro growth curves of tumour cells upon exposure to TNF-α; CC531 (•), ROS-1 (⧫), BN-175 (▪). Six independent assays were performed in duplicate for each point on the line. Mean values (±s.e.m.) are shown.
Figure 4Melphalan concentrations in liver and tumour tissue after IHP with melphalan with or without TNF-α. Six IHPs were performed per tumour type. Mean values (±s.d.) are shown. (*=P<0.05 vs tumour melphalan concentration after IHP with melphalan alone); (A) CC531, (B) ROS-1, (C) BN-175.
Figure 5Microvessel count of CC531, ROS-1 and BN-175 tumours. Mean values (±s.e.m.) are shown (*=P<0.001 vs CC531 and vs ROS-1).