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Optimal treatment scheduling of ionizing radiation and sunitinib improves the antitumor activity and allows dose reduction.

Authors :
Kleibeuker EA
Ten Hooven MA
Castricum KC
Honeywell R
Griffioen AW
Verheul HM
Slotman BJ
Thijssen VL
Source :
Cancer medicine [Cancer Med] 2015 Jul; Vol. 4 (7), pp. 1003-15. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Mar 31.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The combination of radiotherapy with sunitinib is clinically hampered by rare but severe side effects and varying results with respect to clinical benefit. We studied different scheduling regimes and dose reduction in sunitinib and radiotherapy in preclinical tumor models to improve potential outcome of this combination treatment strategy. The chicken chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) was used as an angiogenesis in vivo model and as a xenograft model with human tumor cells (HT29 colorectal adenocarcinoma, OE19 esophageal adenocarcinoma). Treatment consisted of ionizing radiation (IR) and sunitinib as single therapy or in combination, using different dose-scheduling regimes. Sunitinib potentiated the inhibitory effect of IR (4 Gy) on angiogenesis. In addition, IR (4 Gy) and sunitinib (4 days of 32.5 mg/kg per day) inhibited tumor growth. Ionizing radiation induced tumor cell apoptosis and reduced proliferation, whereas sunitinib decreased tumor angiogenesis and reduced tumor cell proliferation. When IR was applied before sunitinib, this almost completely inhibited tumor growth, whereas concurrent IR was less effective and IR after sunitinib had no additional effect on tumor growth. Moreover, optimal scheduling allowed a 50% dose reduction in sunitinib while maintaining comparable antitumor effects. This study shows that the therapeutic efficacy of combination therapy improves when proper dose-scheduling is applied. More importantly, optimal treatment regimes permit dose reductions in the angiogenesis inhibitor, which will likely reduce the side effects of combination therapy in the clinical setting. Our study provides important leads to optimize combination treatment in the clinical setting.<br /> (© 2015 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2045-7634
Volume :
4
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25828633
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.441