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ABSTRACT: Differences in Therapeutic Indexes of Combination Metronomic
Chemotherapy and an Anti-VEGFR-2 Antibody in Multidrug-resistant
Human Breast Cancer Xenografts
One of the greatest barriers to the treatment of cancer with chemotherapeutic
drugs is acquisition of drug resistance. This includes multidrug
resistance mediated by P-glycoprotein (Pgp) to multiple lipophilic
natural compounds such as taxanes, doxorubicin (Adriamycin),
and vinblastine.
The considerable efforts made thus far to reverse
this and other types of drug resistance have had very limited
success. We report here that a variety of orthotopic human breast
cancer xenografts selected for high levels of Pgp and multidrug
resistance respond in a significant and durable manner to different
continuous low-dose (e.g., one-tenth the maximum tolerated dose
of chemotherapy) chemotherapy regimens, when used in combination
with an antivascular endothelial cell growth factor (anti-VEGF)
receptor-2 (flk-1)-neutralizing antibody (DC101).
The Pgp substrates
paclitaxel (Taxol), Adriamycin, and vinblastine were all effective
using this type of combination treatment, although the chemotherapy
protocols showed little or no effect as monotherapies. Similar
results were also obtained using cisplatinum (a non-Pgp substrate
drug) against cisplatinum-resistant tumors.
Evidence of significant
tumor cell death by the combination treatment was detected within
3 weeks of initiation of therapy by histopathological analysis,
in the absence of shrinkage of tumor mass.
There were, however,
marked differences in the cumulative toxicity of long-term regimens
of Adriamycin and cisplatinum, where toxicity was observed, when
compared with the tubulin inhibitors, vinblastine and Taxol,
where it was not.
We conclude that vascular-targeting protocols
involving frequent administration of very low doses of certain
chemotherapeutic drugs can provide a stable and safe way to circumvent
multidrug resistance in established orthotopically growing tumors,
as long as these are used in combination with a second antiangiogenic
drug, in this case, anti-VEGFR-2 blocking antibodies.
[01/22/2002; Clinical Cancer Research]
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