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Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer

BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with metastatic cancer have almost uniformly poor prognoses. The treatments available for patients with disseminated disease are usually not curative and have side effects that limit the therapy that can be given. A treatment that is selectively toxic to tumors would m...

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Autores principales: Aboody, Karen S., Bush, Rebecca A., Garcia, Elizabeth, Metz, Marianne Z., Najbauer, Joseph, Justus, Kristine A., Phelps, Doris A., Remack, Joanna S., Yoon, Karina Jin, Gillespie, Shanna, Kim, Seung U., Glackin, Carlotta A., Potter, Philip M., Danks, Mary K.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1762394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17183650
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000023
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author Aboody, Karen S.
Bush, Rebecca A.
Garcia, Elizabeth
Metz, Marianne Z.
Najbauer, Joseph
Justus, Kristine A.
Phelps, Doris A.
Remack, Joanna S.
Yoon, Karina Jin
Gillespie, Shanna
Kim, Seung U.
Glackin, Carlotta A.
Potter, Philip M.
Danks, Mary K.
author_facet Aboody, Karen S.
Bush, Rebecca A.
Garcia, Elizabeth
Metz, Marianne Z.
Najbauer, Joseph
Justus, Kristine A.
Phelps, Doris A.
Remack, Joanna S.
Yoon, Karina Jin
Gillespie, Shanna
Kim, Seung U.
Glackin, Carlotta A.
Potter, Philip M.
Danks, Mary K.
author_sort Aboody, Karen S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with metastatic cancer have almost uniformly poor prognoses. The treatments available for patients with disseminated disease are usually not curative and have side effects that limit the therapy that can be given. A treatment that is selectively toxic to tumors would maximize the beneficial effects of therapy and minimize side effects, potentially enabling effective treatment to be administered. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We postulated that the tumor-tropic property of stem cells or progenitor cells could be exploited to selectively deliver a therapeutic gene to metastatic solid tumors, and that expression of an appropriate transgene at tumor loci might mediate cures of metastatic disease. To test this hypothesis, we injected HB1.F3.C1 cells transduced to express an enzyme that efficiently activates the anti-cancer prodrug CPT-11 intravenously into mice bearing disseminated neuroblastoma tumors. The HB1.F3.C1 cells migrated selectively to tumor sites regardless of the size or anatomical location of the tumors. Mice were then treated systemically with CPT-11, and the efficacy of treatment was monitored. Mice treated with the combination of HB1.F3.C1 cells expressing the CPT-11-activating enzyme and this prodrug produced tumor-free survival of 100% of the mice for >6 months (P<0.001 compared to control groups). CONCLUSIONS: The novel and significant finding of this study is that it may be possible to exploit the tumor-tropic property of stem or progenitor cells to mediate effective, tumor-selective therapy for metastatic tumors, for which no tolerated curative treatments are currently available.
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spelling pubmed-17623942007-01-04 Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer Aboody, Karen S. Bush, Rebecca A. Garcia, Elizabeth Metz, Marianne Z. Najbauer, Joseph Justus, Kristine A. Phelps, Doris A. Remack, Joanna S. Yoon, Karina Jin Gillespie, Shanna Kim, Seung U. Glackin, Carlotta A. Potter, Philip M. Danks, Mary K. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with metastatic cancer have almost uniformly poor prognoses. The treatments available for patients with disseminated disease are usually not curative and have side effects that limit the therapy that can be given. A treatment that is selectively toxic to tumors would maximize the beneficial effects of therapy and minimize side effects, potentially enabling effective treatment to be administered. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We postulated that the tumor-tropic property of stem cells or progenitor cells could be exploited to selectively deliver a therapeutic gene to metastatic solid tumors, and that expression of an appropriate transgene at tumor loci might mediate cures of metastatic disease. To test this hypothesis, we injected HB1.F3.C1 cells transduced to express an enzyme that efficiently activates the anti-cancer prodrug CPT-11 intravenously into mice bearing disseminated neuroblastoma tumors. The HB1.F3.C1 cells migrated selectively to tumor sites regardless of the size or anatomical location of the tumors. Mice were then treated systemically with CPT-11, and the efficacy of treatment was monitored. Mice treated with the combination of HB1.F3.C1 cells expressing the CPT-11-activating enzyme and this prodrug produced tumor-free survival of 100% of the mice for >6 months (P<0.001 compared to control groups). CONCLUSIONS: The novel and significant finding of this study is that it may be possible to exploit the tumor-tropic property of stem or progenitor cells to mediate effective, tumor-selective therapy for metastatic tumors, for which no tolerated curative treatments are currently available. Public Library of Science 2006-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC1762394/ /pubmed/17183650 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000023 Text en Aboody et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Aboody, Karen S.
Bush, Rebecca A.
Garcia, Elizabeth
Metz, Marianne Z.
Najbauer, Joseph
Justus, Kristine A.
Phelps, Doris A.
Remack, Joanna S.
Yoon, Karina Jin
Gillespie, Shanna
Kim, Seung U.
Glackin, Carlotta A.
Potter, Philip M.
Danks, Mary K.
Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer
title Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer
title_full Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer
title_fullStr Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer
title_short Development of a Tumor-Selective Approach to Treat Metastatic Cancer
title_sort development of a tumor-selective approach to treat metastatic cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1762394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17183650
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000023
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