| Literature DB >> 27026891 |
Yuji Tada1, Kenzo Hiroshima2, Hideaki Shimada3, Masato Shingyoji4, Toshio Suzuki1, Hiroki Umezawa1, Ikuo Sekine5, Yuichi Takiguchi6, Koichiro Tatsumi1, Masatoshi Tagawa7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The third generation of bisphosphonates is clinically in use for patients of osteoporosis or malignancy-linked hypercalcemia. The agents can also produce anti-tumor effects on bone metastasis of several types of tumors. We recently found that one of the agents achieved cytotoxicity to mesothelioma in vitro and in an orthotopic animal model. Mesothelioma is resistant to a number of chemotherapeutic agents, and suppression of local tumor growth is beneficial to the patients since metastasis to extra-thoracic organs is relatively infrequent until a late stage. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Bisphosphonates; Chemotherapy; Clinical study; Mesothelioma; Pleural cavity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27026891 PMCID: PMC4769234 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-1893-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Growth of subcutaneous tumors developed in BALB/c mice. MSTO-211H cells (3 × 106) were subcutaneously inoculated and the mice were injected with PBS or ZOL (15 or 50 μg) in the intraperitoneal cavity twice a week after day 11. Tumor volume was calculated according to the formula (1/2 × length × width2). The tumor volumes were not statistically different at any time in any groups. The average and SE bars are shown (n = 6)
Inhibited tumor growth and body/heart weights after an intrapleural injection of ZOL
| Agent (μg/mouse) | Day of agent administration | Tumor weight (average ± SE) (mg) | Body weight (average ± SE) (g) | Heart weight (average ± SE) (mg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experiment 1 (assessment of tumor weight: day 28) | ||||
| PBS | 3 | 491.1 ± 68.4** | ND | ND |
| ZOL (80 μg) | 3 | 0** | ND | ND |
| Experiment 2 (assessment of tumor weight: day 28) | ||||
| PBS | 3 | 384.8 ± 36.8** | 15.9 ± 5.1** | 99.8 ± 5.2* |
| ZOL (40 μg) | 3 | 19.8 ± 7.2** | 18.9 ± 0.24** | 114.5 ± 3.6* |
| Experiment 3 (assessment of tumor weight: day 35) | ||||
| PBS | 3 | 197.7 ± 22.9** | 18.5 ± 1.0 | 123.2 ± 5.8 |
| ZOL (40 μg) | 3 | 2.5 ± 1.2** | 19.6 ± 0.3 | 129.5 ± 3.5* |
| ZOL (15 μg) | 3 | 79.3 ± 13.2** | 19.2 ± 0.2 | 116.6 ± 3.4* |
| Experiment 4 (assessment of tumor weight: day 28) | ||||
| PBS | 10 | 377.9 ± 13.3* | 16.1 ± 0.4* | ND |
| ZOL (40 μg) | 10 | 188.6 ± 62.1* | 19.2 ± 0.5* | ND |
BALB/c nude mice were inoculated with human mesothelioma, MSTO-211H cells (experiment 1, 2 and 4) or EHMES-10 (experiment 3) (1 × 106/mouse), in the intrapleural cavity and were injected with PBS or ZOL (100 μl in volume) on day 3 or 10. Tumor weights were measured on the indicated day and the averages with standard errors are shown (experiment 1; n = 5, experiment 2; n = 6, experiment 3; n = 7, experiment 4; n = 7)
** P < 0.01; * P < 0.05 (experiment 3; difference of tumor weights is statistically significant in any of two groups and that of heart weights is statistically significant only between ZOL 15 μg- and ZOL 40 μg-injected groups)
Fig. 2Histological pictures of parietal mesothelium of BALB/c nude mice injected with a PBS or b ZOL (40 μg) on day 25. Hematoxylin and eosin staining with ×20 magnifications
Fig. 3A schematic design of the clinical study. The examination for safety ends 14 days after the ZOL injection but the patient are followed up for the efficacy until day 28 and every 4 weeks thereafter. The patient can repeatedly receive ZOL in the pleural cavity at a 4-weeks interval