AI Article Synopsis

  • Cyclopentenyl cytosine (CPEC) enhances the cytotoxic effects of gemcitabine in various human tumor cells and aims to improve treatment efficacy when paired with radiation in pancreatic and lung cancer models.
  • The study showed that CPEC alone leads to a modest delay in tumor growth but did not significantly improve outcomes when combined with gemcitabine or radiation.
  • Overall, the findings suggest that CPEC may not be beneficial as a treatment enhancer for gemcitabine and radiation, indicating limited prospects for its clinical development.

Article Abstract

Cyclopentenyl cytosine (CPEC), targetting the de novo biosynthesis of cytidine triphosphate (CTP), increases the cytotoxicity of gemcitabine (2',2'-difluoro-2'-deoxycytidine, dFdC) alone and in combination with irradiation in several human tumour cells in vitro. We investigated whether CPEC enhances the therapeutic ratio of gemcitabine and irradiation in human pancreatic BxPC-3 xenografts and in rat syngeneic L44 lung tumours. These models were selected because gemcitabine and radiation are used to treat both pancreatic and lung cancer patients and both models differ in growth capacity and in gemcitabine-induced radiosensitisation. A profound dose-dependent CTP-depletion was observed after a single injection of CPEC in both tumour tissue and in normal jejunum. In both models, CPEC alone induced a slight but significant tumour growth delay. The combination of CPEC with gemcitabine, at time intervals that showed CTP-depletion after CPEC, enhanced neither tumour growth delay nor toxicity as compared to gemcitabine alone. In addition, no beneficial effect of CPEC was observed in combination with gemcitabine and radiation. These results suggest that CPEC and gemcitabine alone as well as in combination with radiation target a similar cell population in both tumour models. In conclusion, future clinical development of CPEC as a modulator of gemcitabine combined with radiation is unlikely.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/ijo_00000207DOI Listing

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