| Literature DB >> 23898222 |
Wolfgang Hohenforst-Schmidt1, Paul Zarogoulidis, Kaid Darwiche, Thomas Vogl, Eugene P Goldberg, Haidong Huang, Michael Simoff, Qiang Li, Robert Browning, Francis J Turner, Patrick Le Pivert, Dionysios Spyratos, Konstantinos Zarogoulidis, Seyhan I Celikoglu, Firuz Celikoglu, Johannes Brachmann.
Abstract
Strategies to enhance the already established doublet chemotherapy regimen for lung cancer have been investigated for more than 20 years. Initially, the concept was to administer chemotherapy drugs locally to the tumor site for efficient diffusion through passive transport within the tumor. Recent advances have enhanced the diffusion of pharmaceuticals through active transport by using pharmaceuticals designed to target the genome of tumors. In the present study, five patients with non-small cell lung cancer epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) negative stage IIIa-IV International Union Against Cancer 7 (UICC-7), and with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) 2 scores were administered platinum-based doublet chemotherapy using combined intratumoral-regional and intravenous route of administration. Cisplatin analogues were injected at 0.5%-1% concentration within the tumor lesion and proven malignant lymph nodes according to pretreatment histological/cytological results and the concentration of systemic infusion was decreased to 70% of a standard protocol. This combined intravenous plus intratumoral-regional chemotherapy is used as a first line therapy on this short series of patients. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of direct treatment of involved lymph nodes with cisplatin by endobronchial ultrasound drug delivery with a needle without any adverse effects. The initial overall survival and local response are suggestive of a better efficacy compared to established doublet cisplatin-based systemic chemotherapy in (higher) standard concentrations alone according to the UICC 7 database expected survival. An extensive search of the literature was performed to gather information of previously published literature of intratumoral chemo-drug administration and formulation for this treatment modality. Our study shows a favorable local response, more than a 50% reduction, for a massive tumor mass after administration of five sessions of intratumoral chemotherapy plus two cycles of low-dose intravenous chemotherapy according to our protocol. These encouraging results (even in very sick ECOG 2 patients with central obstructive non-small cell lung cancer having a worse prognosis and quality of life than a non-small cell lung cancer in ECOG 0 of the same tumor node metastasis [TNM]-stage without central obstruction) for a chemotherapy-only protocol that differs from conventional cisplatin-based doublet chemotherapy by the route, target site, and dose paves the way for broader applications of this technique. Finally, future perspectives of this treatment and pharmaceutical design for intratumoral administration are presented.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapy; cisplatin; intratumoral; lung cancer; lymph nodes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23898222 PMCID: PMC3718837 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S46393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Patient characteristics
| Patient stage | ECOG | Local 4-week response | Survival (days) | Histology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. IIIb (cT4N2Mx) | 2 | PR− | 311 | Squamous |
| 2. IV (cT3-4NxM1b) | 2 | PR+ | 429 | Squamous |
| 3. IIIb (cT4N2M0) | 2 | PR+ | 496 | Squamous |
| 4. IV (cT3-4N2M1b) | 2 | PR− | 365 | Adeno |
| 5. IIIa (cT4N1M0) | 2 | NC | 552 | Adeno |
| 6. Mammarian CA IV | 2 | Local CR | 319 | Adeno |
Notes:
Alive upon end of follow-up, other patients died due to cancer-related death. Average PR+ overall survival: 463 days; average PR− overall survival: 338 days. PR+: reduction of >% of initial volume; PR−: reduction of 25%–50% of initial volume.
Expected median survival according to UICC 7 in ECOG 0–1 patients: IIIa 1/5, IIIb 2/5, IV 2/5 = ((1*14 m) + (2*10 m) + (2*6 m))/5 = 9.2 months = 276 days.
Achieved median survival in this ECOG 2 group along our protocol = 13.2 m = 397 days: This means a surplus of 43.8% median survival in comparison to expected survival.
Abbreviations: PR, partial response; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; NC, no change; CR, complete response; Adeno, adenocarcinoma; CA, carcinoma.
Figure 1X-ray from patient 1.
Notes: (A) X-ray upon diagnosis. (B) after one session (1 month). (C) and after two sessions (6 weeks after diagnosis).
Figure 6Scheme of proposed intratumoral protocol. Timing of intravenous 4-week-cycle with weekly intratumoral chemotherapy.
Abbreviations: d, day; ITC, intratumoral; iv, intravenous.
Intratumoral therapy experience
| Author | Methodology | Subjects | Cancer cells/tissue | Response | Nanoparticles | Carriers | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jia et al | Intratumoral plus doxorubicin magnetic field | In vitro/in vivo | Lewis lung cancer | √ | Magnetic Fe3O4 | PLGA | 27 |
| Akeda et al | OK-432 | In vivo | Squamous lung carcinoma | √ | – | – | 80 |
| Li et al | Multifunctional theranostic liposome drug delivery system plus doxorubicin | In vitro/in vivo | Squamous cell carcinoma-4 tumor cells | √ | Magnetic | Liposomes | 62 |
| Goldberg et al | Review | Review | Review | Review | Review | Review | 51 |
| Brincker et al | Review | Review | Review | Review | Review | Review | 61 |
| Celikoglu et al | 5-fluorouracil, mitomycin, methotrexate, bleomycin, mitoxantrone, cisplatin | Patients | Lung cancer | √ | – | – | 16 |
| Fujiwara et al | Intratumoral-P53 | Patients | Lung cancer | √ | – | – | 25 |
Abbreviations: OK, lyophilized incubation mixture of group A Streptococcus pyogenes of human origin; PLGA, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid).
Figure 5Intratumoral chemotherapy model.
Notes: After the local administration, tumor necrosis is observed and micrometastasis occurs through the local abnormal vascular architecture and diffusion through the interstitial fluid.
Abbreviation: IF, interstitial fluid.
Intratumoral studies using different approaches
| Author | Methodology | Subjects | Cancer cells/tissue | Response | Nanoparticles | Carriers | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Horev-Drori et al | 224Ra-loaded wires plus gemcitabine/5-FU | In vitro/in vivo | Pancreas | √ | – | – | 30 |
| Xie et al | Nude rats | Head-neck | √ | √ | Nanoshells | 42 | |
| Hecht et al | TNFerade (AdGVEGR.TNF.11D) | Patients | Pancreas | √ | – | – | 71 |
| Govindarajan et al | TMAF | In vitro/in vivo | Breast-ovarian | √ | – | – | 67 |
| Lin et al | Review | Review | Review | Review | Lipid nanoparticles | Review | 41 |
| Cunha-Filho et al | In vitro | Intratumoral implant | √ | – | – | 28 | |
| Zheng et al | ICG-PL-PEG-mAb | In vitro/in vivo | U87-MG human glioblastoma cancer cells | √ | ICG-PL-PEG-mAb | PL-PEG | 74 |
| Luo et al | Core-loaded fibers with hydroxycam ptothecin | In vitro/in vivo | H22 hepatoma cells | √ | – | Fibers | 75 |
| Tsuda et al | In vitro/in vivo | BI6 melanoma cell line | √ | – | – | 77 | |
| Oh et al | SLC-Fc, CpG-ODN | In vitro/in vivo | B16F10 murine melanoma model | √ | – | – | 78 |
| Yang et al | Hul4.18-IL-2 | In vitro/in vivo | NXS2 neuroblastoma Cell line | √ | – | – | 79 |
| Peiris et al | Three nanoparticle magnetic chain with doxorubicin | In vitro/in vivo | MAT Bill tumor-bearing animals | √ | Nano chain magnetic particles | – | 64 |
| Hanna et al | BC-819 | In vitro/in vivo | Pancreas | √ | – | – | 72 |
| Liu et al | mPEG-PCL-Docetaxel | In vitro/in vivo | H22 hepatoma cells | √ | mPEG-PCL | Poly (caprolactone) | 69 |
| Luo et al | PELA fibers plus hydroxycam ptothecin | In vitro/in vivo | H22 hepatoma cells | √ | PELA | Poly(D,L-lactide) | 76 |
| Geletneky et al | Parvovirus H-1 | In vivo | Glioblastoma multiforme | √ | – | – | 73 |
| Zhao et al | NLP-PEG, CLP-PEG plus DOX | In vitro/in vivo | H22 hepatoma cells | √ | DOX-NLPs, DOX-CLPs, DOX-NLP-PEG, DOX-CLP-PEG | Cationic liposomes, nanolipid particles | 44 |
| Ahmed et al | Nanoparticles and thermal ablation | Review | Review | Review | Review | Review | 29 |
| Betting et al | CpG plus rituximab/cyclophosphamide | In vitro/in vivo | B-cell lymphoma | √ | – | – | 81 |
| Son et al | Dendritic cells plus cyclophosphamide/irradiation | In vitro/in vivo | CT-26 colon carcinoma cell line | √ | – | – | 83 |
| Galili | Anti-gal human antibody | Review | Review | Review | Review | Review | 84 |
| Hamalukic et al | HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor lovastatin | In vitro/in vivo | HT29 human colon carcinoma cells | √ | – | – | 85 |
| Raut et al | Sorafenib | Patients | Refractory sarcomas | √ | – | – | 86 |
| Werner et al | Cisplatin/epinephrine | Patients | Head neck | √ | – | – | 65 |
Abbreviations: FU, fluorouracil; PEG, polyethylene glycol;U-87-MG, human glioblastoma-astrocytoma, epithelial-like cell line; DOX, doxorubicin; B 16, melanoma cell line; HMG-CoA, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A; PL, polylactic; H22, hepatoma cells; CT-26, colon carcinoma cell line; ODN, oligodeoxynucleotide; HT29, human colon carcinoma cell lines; B16F10, murine metastatic melanoma in the tails of C57BL/6 mice; TNFerade, a replication-deficient adenoviral vector that expresses tumor necrosis factor-α (TUMOR NECROSIS FACTOR-α); BC-819, a plasmid comprised of the H 19 gene regulatory sequences; mPEG-PCL, poly(caprolactone); PELA, poly(D,L-lactide); SLC-Fc, secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine-Fc; CLP, cationic liposomes; NLP, neutral liposomes; ICG-PL-PEG-mAb, Indocyanine green-polylactic-polyethylene glycol-integrin α(v)β(3) monoclonal antibody; AdGVEGRTNF. 11D, a replication-deficient adenoviral vector that expresses tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-α); Hu14.18-IL-2, an immunocytokine consisting of human IL-2 linked to hu14.18 mAb, which recognizes the GD2 disialoganglioside; NXS2, neuroblastoma cell line; MAT B, animals (inoculated with Mat B-lll-uPAR cells).
Effects and safety features
| Patient | Adverse effect | Positive effect | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Enforced bleeding after 1 ITC (infiltration of the LLL-vein) | Stopped moderate chronical bleeding after second ITC, no recurrence of bleeding. | PR– (main symptom was bleeding). |
| 2 | Vomiting, nausea, and hematotoxicity. (1800 Leuc./uL) after first ITC with 100 mg cisplatin. | Could swallow again after second ITC stopping muscle waste, walks alone. | PR+; possible infiltration of the esophagus in reference to thorax-CT. Hematotoxicity as a proof of systemic effect. |
| 3 | None | Relief of dyspnoea and mucous retention, stopped chronical bleeding after first ITC. | PR+ |
| 4 | None | Relief of retention, reduced pCO2. | PR−; heavy smoker until death. |
| 5 | Acute cytotoxicity in the complete ROL as COP (including S3) radiological without clinical relevance and spontaneous regression without any lasting damage; needle was steered from inside at the inner 2/3 margin of the lobar atelectasis which occluded orifice S1+2 in ROL. | None (slightly less back pain). | NC |
| 6 | Fever for 3 days after ITC. | Local CR, no longer bleeding or retention. | Local CR; acute short mediastinitis? Breast cancer stage IV with tracheal metastasis (out of protocol). |
Abbreviations: CT, computed tomography; ITC, intratumoral chemotherapy; CR, complete response; COP, cryptogenic organising pneumonia; Leuc, leucocytes; ROL, right upper lobe (rul); PR, partial response; pCO2, partial carbondioxide measurement; LLL, left lower lobe; S, subsegment; NC, no change.