| Literature DB >> 28588778 |
Seth Kim1, Noah Federman2, Erlinda M Gordon1,3, Frederick L Hall3, Sant P Chawla1.
Abstract
Soft tissue sarcoma is a rare neoplasm of mesenchymal origin, accounting for only ~1% of all adult cancers and consisting of 75 histological subtypes. In the present report, the unique case of a 14 year-old female with metastatic malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (formerly, malignant melanotic schwannoma) of the parotid gland, who experienced a durable response and sustained tumor control with Rexin-G®, a tumor-targeted retroviral expression vector encoding an anti-cyclin G1 construct, is described. Post-parotidectomy, and prior to the administration of Rexin-G®, the patient received various chemotherapy regimens, including doxorubicin, ifosfamide, temozolomide, sorafenib, and an immunological therapy with interleukin-2, which only resulted in the further progression of lung metastases. The patient subsequently participated in a Phase 1/2 gene therapy study, during which she received intravenous Rexin-G® as monotherapy for two years with minimal drug-associated adverse events. Currently, the patient has no evidence of active disease 9 years after commencing the Rexin-G® treatment, and with no additional anti-cancer therapy. In conclusion, Rexin-G® may be a viable therapeutic option for malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors, and should be further investigated in prospective histology-specific clinical trials for this type, and possibly other types, of chemotherapy-resistant sarcoma.Entities:
Keywords: cell cycle control; metastatic sarcoma; targeted gene therapy vector
Year: 2017 PMID: 28588778 PMCID: PMC5451875 DOI: 10.3892/mco.2017.1231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Clin Oncol ISSN: 2049-9450
USA-based clinical trials using tumor-targeted Rexin-G® for chemotherapy-resistant solid malignancies.
| Clinical trial protocol number/dose level[ | Clinical site(s)/Phase | Clinical indication | No. of patients | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00121745; dose level, minus 3-minus 1 | Rochester, MN, USA: Phase 1 | Pancreas CA | 12 | 0% 1-year OS |
| NCT00504998[ | Santa Monica, CA, USA/Manhattan, NY, USA/(Duke) Durham, NC, USA: Phase 1/2 | Pancreas CA | 20 | 26.7% 1-year OS 13.3% 2-year OS 1 alive in sustained remission, 9-year OS |
| NCT00505713[ | Santa Monica, CA, USA: Phase 1/2 | Bone and soft tissue sarcoma | 36 | 38.5% 1-year OS; 31% 2-year OS 1 alive with no active disease, 9-year OS |
| NCT00505271; dose level, 1–4 | Santa Monica, CA, USA/Manhattan, NY, USA: Phase 1/2 | Breast CA | 20 | 60% 1-year OS |
| NCT00572130; dose level, 1–2 | Santa Monica, CA, USA: Phase 2 | Osteosarcoma | 22 | 27.3% 1-year OS 22.7% 2-year OS 1 alive in sustained remission, 8 years |
Dose levels were calculated as follows: Dose level 1=1×10e11 cfu; dose level 2=2×10e11 cfu; dose level 3=3×10e11 cfu; and dose level 4=4×10e11 cfu.
A randomization test on the log-rank statistic using 20,000 random samples revealed a dose-response association between overall survival and the Rexin-G dosage (P=0.002 for sarcoma and 0.04 for pancreas cancer). Analysis was done using NCSS software (Number Cruncher Statistical Systems, Kaysville, UT, USA). Statistical analysis was performed by a biostatistician who was not otherwise involved in the study. CA, carcinoma; cfu colony forming units; OS, overall survival.
Figure 1.Various tumor parameters of the patient monitored over time. (A) Individual tumor volume measurements over time. Tumor volumes of individual target lesions (measured by CT imaging), in mm3, were calculated using O'Reilly's formula (length × width2 × 0.52). (B) Individual tumor density measurements over time. Tumor densities of individual target lesions, in HU, were calculated by radiographic image analysis. (C) Individual FDG avidity measurements over time. Avidities of individual target lesions for 18-FDG (SUVmax) were measured in individual target lesions using a PET/CT scan. CT, computed tomography; PET, positron emission tomography; HU, Hounsfeld units; FDG, fluorodeoxyglucose; SUVmax, maximum standardized uptake value.
Figure 2.Illustration of the tumor microenvironment compared with normal tissues. (A) Normal tissue. (B) The XC-targeting motif enables the vector to seek out and accumulate in the tumor microenvironment by binding to abnormally exposed proteins found abundantly in tumors, e.g., as a result of tumor invasion, ECM remodeling and neoangiogenesis, but not in normal tissues. Xc, exposed collagenous; ECM, extracellular matrix.
Figure 3.An illustration of the mechanism of action of Rexin-G®. The Rexin-G® nanoparticle displays an XC-targeting motif, derived from the coagulation factor, vWF, on its surface amphotropic gp70 envelope protein. When injected intravenously, Rexin-G® seeks out and accumulates in cancerous lesions by binding to exposed collagenous (XC) proteins. This chimeric retrovector has the innate property of binding to a tumor's natural viral/cell receptor, fusing, entering, uncoating, and integrating randomly into the chromosomes of only actively dividing cells (i.e., cancer cells). This selective property spares all terminally differentiated and/or non-replicative cells of normal organs, including hepatocytes, neuronal cells and myocardial cells. Rexin-G® carries a cytocidal dominant negative cyclin G1 construct, which causes cell death via apoptosis. vWF, von Willebrand factor; XC, exposed collagenous.