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Tumour irradiation combined with vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy enhances antitumour effects in pre-clinical prostate cancer

Authors :
Danny Allen
Stephen J. Lockett
Ruth J. Muschel
Tamar Yechezkel
Paul Kinchesh
Boris Vojnovic
Alastair D. Lamb
Hanna T. Sjoberg
Dina Preise
Richard J. Bryant
Jens Rittscher
Ka Ho Tam
Adrian L. Harris
Ian G. Mills
Yiannis Philippou
Anette L Magnussen
Iain D. C. Tullis
Emma A Murphy
Lilach Agemy
Freddie C. Hamdy
David A. Wink
Andrea Chatrian
Avigdor Scherz
Sean Smart
Joël Lefebvre
Stuart Gilchrist
Esther Bridges
David A. Scheiblin
Source :
Sjoberg, H T, Philippou, Y, Magnussen, A L, Tullis, I D C, Bridges, E, Chatrian, A, Lefebvre, J, Tam, K H, Murphy, E A, Rittscher, J, Preise, D, Agemy, L, Yechezkel, T, Smart, S C, Kinchesh, P, Gilchrist, S, Allen, D P, Scheiblin, D A, Lockett, S J, Wink, D A, Lamb, A D, Mills, I G, Harris, A, Muschel, R J, Vojnovic, B, Scherz, A, Hamdy, F C & Bryant, R J 2021, ' Tumour irradiation combined with vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy enhances antitumour effects in pre-clinical prostate cancer ', British Journal of Cancer, vol. 125, pp. 534-546 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-021-01450-6, British Journal of Cancer
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background There is a need to improve the treatment of prostate cancer (PCa) and reduce treatment side effects. Vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy (VTP) is a focal therapy for low-risk low-volume localised PCa, which rapidly disrupts targeted tumour vessels. There is interest in expanding the use of VTP to higher-risk disease. Tumour vasculature is characterised by vessel immaturity, increased permeability, aberrant branching and inefficient flow. FRT alters the tumour microenvironment and promotes transient ‘vascular normalisation’. We hypothesised that multimodality therapy combining fractionated radiotherapy (FRT) and VTP could improve PCa tumour control compared against monotherapy with FRT or VTP. Methods We investigated whether sequential delivery of FRT followed by VTP 7 days later improves flank TRAMP-C1 PCa tumour allograft control compared to monotherapy with FRT or VTP. Results FRT induced ‘vascular normalisation’ changes in PCa flank tumour allografts, improving vascular function as demonstrated using dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging. FRT followed by VTP significantly delayed tumour growth in flank PCa allograft pre-clinical models, compared with monotherapy with FRT or VTP, and improved overall survival. Conclusion Combining FRT and VTP may be a promising multimodal approach in PCa therapy. This provides proof-of-concept for this multimodality treatment to inform early phase clinical trials.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sjoberg, H T, Philippou, Y, Magnussen, A L, Tullis, I D C, Bridges, E, Chatrian, A, Lefebvre, J, Tam, K H, Murphy, E A, Rittscher, J, Preise, D, Agemy, L, Yechezkel, T, Smart, S C, Kinchesh, P, Gilchrist, S, Allen, D P, Scheiblin, D A, Lockett, S J, Wink, D A, Lamb, A D, Mills, I G, Harris, A, Muschel, R J, Vojnovic, B, Scherz, A, Hamdy, F C & Bryant, R J 2021, ' Tumour irradiation combined with vascular-targeted photodynamic therapy enhances antitumour effects in pre-clinical prostate cancer ', British Journal of Cancer, vol. 125, pp. 534-546 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-021-01450-6, British Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....95e332f7007516e12e8126b136968964