Imatinib Mesylate Efficiently Achieves Therapeutic Intratumor Concentrations in Vivo but Has Limited Activity in a Xenograft Model of Small Cell Lung Cancer

NC Wolff, DE Randle, MJ Egorin, JD Minna… - Clinical cancer …, 2004 - AACR
NC Wolff, DE Randle, MJ Egorin, JD Minna, RL Ilaria Jr
Clinical cancer research, 2004AACR
Purpose: Despite recent advances in cancer therapy, long-term survival in small cell lung
cancer (SCLC) remains uncommon, underscoring the need for novel therapeutic
approaches. Previous studies have identified constitutive expression of the receptor tyrosine
kinase, c-Kit, and its ligand, stem cell factor, in a substantial proportion of SCLC specimens.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether imatinib mesylate, an inhibitor of c-Kit,
could achieve therapeutic concentrations in tumors and in brain (a frequent site of SCLC …
Abstract
Purpose: Despite recent advances in cancer therapy, long-term survival in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) remains uncommon, underscoring the need for novel therapeutic approaches. Previous studies have identified constitutive expression of the receptor tyrosine kinase, c-Kit, and its ligand, stem cell factor, in a substantial proportion of SCLC specimens. The purpose of this study was to determine whether imatinib mesylate, an inhibitor of c-Kit, could achieve therapeutic concentrations in tumors and in brain (a frequent site of SCLC metastasis) and interfere with SCLC tumor growth in vivo.
Experimental Design: Human SCLC tumor cell lines with constitutive c-kit expression and tyrosine phosphorylation (NCI-H209, NCI-H526, and NCI-H1607) were used to establish SCLC tumor xenografts in NCr nude (nu/nu)-immunodeficient mice. SCLC tumor-bearing mice were randomly assigned to imatinib or control (water) administered twice a day by oral gavage. Imatinib concentrations in plasma, brain, and tumor were quantitated and correlated with tumor response.
Results: Therapeutic concentrations of imatinib were achieved in plasma and tumor xenografts but not in the brain. Imatinib blocked the constitutive activation of c-kit in SCLC tumor cell lines in vitro but had a negligible effect on SCLC xenograft growth in vivo.
Conclusions: Orally administered imatinib rapidly reaches therapeutic concentrations in SCLC xenografts, suggesting the feasibility of combining imatinib with other novel or traditional chemotherapeutic agents in SCLC or other solid tumors. The c-Kit signaling pathway does not appear to play a critical role in SCLC proliferation and viability in vivo, however, suggesting that imatinib is unlikely to be effective as monotherapy for SCLC.
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