Literature DB >> 23580781

A proposal regarding reporting of in vitro testing results.

Malcolm A Smith1, Peter Houghton.   

Abstract

The high rate of negative clinical trials and failed drug development programs calls into question the use of preclinical testing as currently practiced. An important issue for the in vitro testing of agents that have advanced into the clinic is the use of clinically irrelevant concentrations in reports making claims for anticancer activity, as illustrated by publications for sorafenib, vorinostat, and metformin. For sorafenib, high protein binding leads to a dichotomy between concentrations active in the 10% serum conditions commonly used for in vitro testing and concentrations active in plasma. Failure to recognize this distinction leads to inappropriate claims of activity for sorafenib based on the micromolar concentrations commonly used for in vitro testing in low serum conditions. For vorinostat and metformin, results using in vitro concentrations higher than those achievable in patients are reported despite the availability of publications describing human pharmacokinetic data for each agent. We encourage journal editors and reviewers to pay greater attention to clinically relevant concentrations when considering reports that include in vitro testing of agents for which human pharmacokinetic data are available. Steps taken to more carefully scrutinize activity claims based on in vitro results can help direct researchers away from clinically irrelevant lines of research and toward lines of research that are more likely to lead to positive clinical trials and to improved treatments for patients with cancer. ©2013 AACR

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23580781      PMCID: PMC3741962          DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-13-0043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  51 in total

1.  Phase II trial of the pan-deacetylase inhibitor panobinostat as a single agent in advanced relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.

Authors:  Jeffrey L Wolf; David Siegel; Hartmut Goldschmidt; Katharine Hazell; Priscille M Bourquelot; Bourras R Bengoudifa; Jeffrey Matous; Ravi Vij; Margarida de Magalhaes-Silverman; Rafat Abonour; Kenneth C Anderson; Sagar Lonial
Journal:  Leuk Lymphoma       Date:  2012-03-01

2.  Drug development: Raise standards for preclinical cancer research.

Authors:  C Glenn Begley; Lee M Ellis
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-03-28       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Population pharmacokinetics of metformin in obese and non-obese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  Christophe Bardin; Estelle Nobecourt; Etienne Larger; François Chast; Jean-Marc Treluyer; Saik Urien
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2012-01-25       Impact factor: 2.953

4.  Believe it or not: how much can we rely on published data on potential drug targets?

Authors:  Florian Prinz; Thomas Schlange; Khusru Asadullah
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2011-08-31       Impact factor: 84.694

5.  The effect of food on the bioavailability of panobinostat, an orally active pan-histone deacetylase inhibitor, in patients with advanced cancer.

Authors:  Geoffrey I Shapiro; Richard Frank; Uday B Dandamudi; Thomas Hengelage; Lily Zhao; Lucien Gazi; Maria Grazia Porro; Margaret M Woo; Lionel D Lewis
Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol       Date:  2011-11-06       Impact factor: 3.333

6.  Sustained inhibition of deacetylases is required for the antitumor activity of the histone deactylase inhibitors panobinostat and vorinostat in models of colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Peter M Wilson; Melissa J Labonte; Shelby C Martin; Stephanie T Kuwahara; Anthony El-Khoueiry; Heinz-Josef Lenz; Robert D Ladner
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2013-01-09       Impact factor: 3.850

7.  Plasma protein binding of sorafenib, a multi kinase inhibitor: in vitro and in cancer patients.

Authors:  Maria Cristina Villarroel; Keith W Pratz; Linping Xu; John J Wright; B Douglas Smith; Michelle A Rudek
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2011-11-17       Impact factor: 3.850

8.  Targeting autophagy enhances sorafenib lethality for hepatocellular carcinoma via ER stress-related apoptosis.

Authors:  Ying-Hong Shi; Zhen-Bin Ding; Jian Zhou; Bo Hui; Guo-Ming Shi; Ai-Wu Ke; Xiao-Ying Wang; Zhi Dai; Yuan-Fei Peng; Cheng-Yu Gu; Shuang-Jian Qiu; Jia Fan
Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2011-10-01       Impact factor: 16.016

9.  The Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia enables predictive modelling of anticancer drug sensitivity.

Authors:  Jordi Barretina; Giordano Caponigro; Nicolas Stransky; Kavitha Venkatesan; Adam A Margolin; Sungjoon Kim; Christopher J Wilson; Joseph Lehár; Gregory V Kryukov; Dmitriy Sonkin; Anupama Reddy; Manway Liu; Lauren Murray; Michael F Berger; John E Monahan; Paula Morais; Jodi Meltzer; Adam Korejwa; Judit Jané-Valbuena; Felipa A Mapa; Joseph Thibault; Eva Bric-Furlong; Pichai Raman; Aaron Shipway; Ingo H Engels; Jill Cheng; Guoying K Yu; Jianjun Yu; Peter Aspesi; Melanie de Silva; Kalpana Jagtap; Michael D Jones; Li Wang; Charles Hatton; Emanuele Palescandolo; Supriya Gupta; Scott Mahan; Carrie Sougnez; Robert C Onofrio; Ted Liefeld; Laura MacConaill; Wendy Winckler; Michael Reich; Nanxin Li; Jill P Mesirov; Stacey B Gabriel; Gad Getz; Kristin Ardlie; Vivien Chan; Vic E Myer; Barbara L Weber; Jeff Porter; Markus Warmuth; Peter Finan; Jennifer L Harris; Matthew Meyerson; Todd R Golub; Michael P Morrissey; William R Sellers; Robert Schlegel; Levi A Garraway
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-03-28       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Downregulation of organic cation transporters OCT1 (SLC22A1) and OCT3 (SLC22A3) in human hepatocellular carcinoma and their prognostic significance.

Authors:  Michael Heise; Anja Lautem; Johanna Knapstein; Jörn M Schattenberg; Maria Hoppe-Lotichius; Daniel Foltys; Nina Weiler; Anca Zimmermann; Arno Schad; Dirk Gründemann; Gerd Otto; Peter R Galle; Marcus Schuchmann; Tim Zimmermann
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2012-03-22       Impact factor: 4.430

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  35 in total

Review 1.  Challenges and Opportunities for Childhood Cancer Drug Development.

Authors:  Peter J Houghton; Raushan T Kurmasheva
Journal:  Pharmacol Rev       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 25.468

Review 2.  Mitigating risk in academic preclinical drug discovery.

Authors:  Jayme L Dahlin; James Inglese; Michael A Walters
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2015-04       Impact factor: 84.694

3.  A practical guide for transparent reporting of research on natural products in the British Journal of Pharmacology: Reproducibility of natural product research.

Authors:  Angelo A Izzo; Mauro Teixeira; Steve P H Alexander; Giuseppe Cirino; James R Docherty; Christopher H George; Paul A Insel; Yong Ji; David A Kendall; Reynold A Panattieri; Christopher G Sobey; S Clare Stanford; Barbara Stefanska; Gary Stephens; Amrita Ahluwalia
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2020-04-16       Impact factor: 8.739

4.  A Microfluidic Perfusion Platform for In Vitro Analysis of Drug Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) Relationships.

Authors:  Yadir A Guerrero; Diti Desai; Connor Sullivan; Erick Kindt; Mary E Spilker; Tristan S Maurer; Deepak E Solomon; Derek W Bartlett
Journal:  AAPS J       Date:  2020-03-02       Impact factor: 4.009

Review 5.  Clinically Relevant Concentrations of Anticancer Drugs: A Guide for Nonclinical Studies.

Authors:  Dane R Liston; Myrtle Davis
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 12.531

6.  The CoLoMoTo Interactive Notebook: Accessible and Reproducible Computational Analyses for Qualitative Biological Networks.

Authors:  Aurélien Naldi; Céline Hernandez; Nicolas Levy; Gautier Stoll; Pedro T Monteiro; Claudine Chaouiya; Tomáš Helikar; Andrei Zinovyev; Laurence Calzone; Sarah Cohen-Boulakia; Denis Thieffry; Loïc Paulevé
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2018-06-19       Impact factor: 4.566

7.  Metformin pharmacogenomics: a genome-wide association study to identify genetic and epigenetic biomarkers involved in metformin anticancer response using human lymphoblastoid cell lines.

Authors:  Nifang Niu; Tongzheng Liu; Junmei Cairns; Reynold C Ly; Xianglin Tan; Min Deng; Brooke L Fridley; Krishna R Kalari; Ryan P Abo; Gregory Jenkins; Anthony Batzler; Erin E Carlson; Poulami Barman; Sebastian Moran; Holger Heyn; Manel Esteller; Liewei Wang
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2016-11-01       Impact factor: 6.150

8.  Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors sensitize cancer cells to death receptor-mediated apoptosis by enhancing death receptor expression.

Authors:  X Wei Meng; Brian D Koh; Jin-San Zhang; Karen S Flatten; Paula A Schneider; Daniel D Billadeau; Allan D Hess; B Douglas Smith; Judith E Karp; Scott H Kaufmann
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2014-07-25       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Sorafenib improves alkylating therapy by blocking induced inflammation, invasion and angiogenesis in breast cancer cells.

Authors:  Alfeu Zanotto-Filho; Subapriya Rajamanickam; Eva Loranc; V Pragathi Masamsetti; Aparna Gorthi; July Carolina Romero; Sonal Tonapi; Rosangela Mayer Gonçalves; Robert L Reddick; Raymond Benavides; John Kuhn; Yidong Chen; Alexander J R Bishop
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2018-03-30       Impact factor: 8.679

10.  Sorafenib/regorafenib and lapatinib interact to kill CNS tumor cells.

Authors:  Hossein A Hamed; Seyedmehrad Tavallai; Steven Grant; Andrew Poklepovic; Paul Dent
Journal:  J Cell Physiol       Date:  2015-01       Impact factor: 6.384

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