| Literature DB >> 20588272 |
S J Lunt1, C Cawthorne, M Ali, B A Telfer, M Babur, A Smigova, P J Julyan, P M Price, I J Stratford, W D Bloomer, M V Papadopoulou, K J Williams.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metastases cause most cancer-related deaths. We investigated the use of hypoxia-selective cytotoxins as adjuvants to radiotherapy in the control of metastatic tumour growth.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20588272 PMCID: PMC2906743 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6605753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1NLCQ-1 is an effective hypoxic cytotoxin against KHT cells in vitro, but does not impair KHT tumour growth in vivo. KHT cells (A) were exposed to NLCQ-1 under aerobic or anoxic conditions for 3 h. Proliferation was assessed 4 days later by MTT assay. Data points represent the average relative proliferation compared with untreated control cells from three experiments (±s.d.). Exposure to anoxia alone did not influence KHT proliferation (average OD540 aerobic controls 1.4 vs 1.3 for anoxic controls). (B) KHT cells were inoculated into C3H mice. Once tumours had established NLCQ-1 was administered daily for 4 consecutive days (15 mg kg–1). Presented are average tumour volume measurements (±s.e.; n=8 per group).
Figure 2Hypoxic KHT lung micrometastases are evident 3 days after radiotherapy of the primary tumours. (A) Primary KHT tumours were irradiated with 25 Gy and lungs excised at various times thereafter. Pimonidazole was administered before lung excision and adduct formation (brown staining) revealed after immunohistochemical analysis (top panels). The H&E staining in comparative sections is shown in the lower panels. (B) Schematic of treatment protocol.
Figure 3NLCQ-1 yields little improvement in local control compared with tirapazamine and RB6145, but is superior in the control of metastatic disease when administered as an adjuvant to radiotherapy. Primary tumour response was monitored post-treatment with radiotherapy (administered on day 1) and bioreductive agent or saline (days 4–7) (A). Evidence of re-growth after treatment (see Materials and Methods for details) was taken as a loss of local control and this is expressed as per cent of treated mice with time after treatment. KHT lung metastatic burden was assessed using a semi-quantitative system when 50% of saline-treated control mice exhibited evidence of disease (B). The histograms show the frequency distribution of metastatic grade for each treatment. Data shown were pooled from three independent experiments. The first compared RB6145 (n=10) and tirapazamine (n=10) vs saline control (n=12); the second NLCQ-1 (n=9) vs saline control (n=7) and the third NLCQ-1 vs saline control (n=3/group). There was no significant difference in the control data for the three experiments. Bioreductive treatments were NLCQ-1, 15 mg kg–1 once daily; tirapazamine 13 mg kg−1 twice daily; RB6145 75 mg kg−1 twice daily or saline twice daily.
Figure 4Primary KHT tumours (circled) show robust uptake of both [18F]FDG and [18F]FLT. Coronal and sagittal maximum intensity projections are shown, obtained 9 days after KHT cell implant after IV administration of ∼10 MBq [18F]FDG (A) or [18F]FLT (B).
Figure 5KHT lung metastases can be resolved using [18F]FDG PET. Coronal and sagittal maximum intensity projections are shown, obtained 20 days after primary tumour radiotherapy and subsequent treatment with saline (A) or NLCQ-1 (B) after IV administration of ∼10 MBq [18F]FDG. Note multiple lung metastases in (A) and the presence of a lymph node metastasis (arrow). H&E assessment of the lungs of the mice shown in (A) and (B) confirms the presence of lung metastases in the saline-treated mouse (C). The number of metastases resolved by PET shows an excellent correlation with the semi-quantitative scoring of burden in excised lungs (D). Closed symbols, control tumours; open symbols, NLCQ-1-treated tumours.