| Literature DB >> 27706035 |
Jie Xiao1,2, Xiaobo Xu3, Xiao Li4,5, Yanli Li6,7, Guobing Liu8,9, Hui Tan10,11, Hua Shen12, Hongcheng Shi13,14, Dengfeng Cheng15,16.
Abstract
The malignant behaviors of solid tumors such as growth, infiltration and metastasis are mainly nourished by tumor neovascularization. Thus, anti-angiogenic therapy is key to controlling tumor progression. Bevacizumab, a humanized anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) antibody, plus chemotherapy or biological therapy can prolong survival for cancer patients, but treatment-related mortality is a concern. To improve inhibitory effect and decrease side-effects on non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), we used Re-188, which is a β emitting radionuclide, directly labeled with bevacizumab for radioimmunotherapy in a human A549 tumor model. Cytotoxic assay data showed that, after 188ReO₄- or 188Re-bevacizumab at different concentration for 4 and 24 h, a time- and radioactivity does-dependent reduction in cell viability occurred. Also, an apoptosis assay conformed great apoptosis in the 188Re-bevacizumab group compared with controls and other treatment groups. In vivo, tumor volumes in the 188Re-bevacizumab (11.1 MBq/mice) group were not reduced but growth was delayed compared with other groups. Thus, 188Re-bevacizumab enhanced the therapeutic effect of bevacizumab, suggesting a potential therapeutic strategy for NSCLC treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Re-188; Tc-99m; bevacizumab; non-small cell lung cancer; radioimmunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27706035 PMCID: PMC6273882 DOI: 10.3390/molecules21101308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1(A) Synthesis of 188Re-bevacizumab by a two-step reaction; (B) Effects of pH on complexation yield of 188Re-bevacizumab; (C) Stability of 188Re-bevacizumab incubated with normal saline (pH 7.4) and mouse serum in vitro at room temperature was measured at various times.
Figure 2Cell viability is in a radioactive- and time-dependent manner. (A) Dose-dependent test: changes of cell viability after incubation with fresh medium containing bevacizumab at various concentrations, free 188Re and 188Re-bevacizumab; (B) Time-dependent test: compared average cell viability of all treated group (bevacizumab, free 188Re and 188Re-bevacizumab) at 4 h and at 24 h.
Figure 3The percentage of apoptotic cells, inducing by bevacizumab (B); unbound 188ReO4− (C) and 188Re-bevacizumab (D) at equal concentration or radioactivity, untreated group as control (A). (E) The combined pro-apoptotic efficiency of 188Re-bevacizumab is greater than the sum if each agent used along. ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.
Figure 4Maximum Intensity Projection (MIP) images and its axial, transverse and sagittal images demonstrate that 99mTc-bevacizumab uptake in tumor are less than pre-therapy.
Figure 5The alteration of tumor volumes and body weight. (A) Tumor volume are effectively inhibited in 188Re-bevacizumab group; (B) No significant weight loss is occurred in 88Re-bevacizumab group.