Purpose: Conventional anticancer treatments are often impaired by the presence of hypoxia. TH-302 selectively targets hypoxic tumor regions, where it is converted into a cytotoxic agent. This study assessed the efficacy of the combination treatment of TH-302 and radiotherapy in two preclinical tumor models. The effect of oxygen modification on the combination treatment was evaluated and the effect of TH-302 on the hypoxic fraction (HF) was monitored using [(18)F]HX4-PET imaging and pimonidazole IHC stainings.
Experimental Design: Rhabdomyosarcoma R1 and H460 NSCLC tumor-bearing animals were treated with TH-302 and radiotherapy (8 Gy, single dose). The tumor oxygenation status was altered by exposing animals to carbogen (95% oxygen) and nicotinamide, 21% or 7% oxygen breathing during the course of the treatment. Tumor growth and treatment toxicity were monitored until the tumor reached four times its start volume (T4×SV).
Results: Both tumor models showed a growth delay after TH-302 treatment, which further increased when combined with radiotherapy (enhancement ratio rhabdomyosarcoma 1.23; H460 1.49). TH-302 decreases the HF in both models, consistent with its hypoxia-targeting mechanism of action. Treatment efficacy was dependent on tumor oxygenation; increasing the tumor oxygen status abolished the effect of TH-302, whereas enhancing the HF enlarged TH-302's therapeutic effect. An association was observed in rhabdomyosarcoma tumors between the pretreatment HF as measured by [(18)F]HX4-PET imaging and the T4×SV.
Conclusions: The combination of TH-302 and radiotherapy is promising and warrants clinical testing, preferably guided by the companion biomarker [(18)F]HX4 hypoxia PET imaging for patient selection.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-0018 | DOI Listing |
Anticancer Res
December 2023
Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Background/aim: Hypoxia-activated pro-drugs, such as TH-302, may kill hypoxic treatment-resistant tumor cells, but have failed in clinical trials. This may be related to variable levels of drug-activating reductases. Compounds such as bacteria-derived BE-43547, which target hypoxic cells independently of reductases, may be beneficial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Oncol
July 2021
Department of Nuclear Medicine, The Second Clinical Medical College, Jinan University (Shenzhen People's Hospital), Shenzhen, China.
Hypoxia is an important characteristic of most solid malignancies, and is closely related to tumor prognosis and therapeutic resistance. Hypoxia is one of the most important factors associated with resistance to conventional radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Therapies targeting tumor hypoxia have attracted considerable attention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pharmacol
April 2021
Department of Nuclear Medicine, The Second Clinical Medical College, Jinan University (Shenzhen People's Hospital), Shenzhen, China.
Hypoxia is an important feature of most solid tumors, conferring resistance to radiation and many forms of chemotherapy. However, it is possible to exploit the presence of tumor hypoxia with hypoxia-activated prodrugs (HAPs), agents that in low oxygen conditions undergo bioreduction to yield cytotoxic metabolites. Although many such agents have been developed, we will focus here on TH-302.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancers (Basel)
April 2021
Département de Cancérologie Pédiatrique, Institut D'hématologie et D'oncologie Pédiatrique, 69008 Lyon, France.
Hypoxia is a hallmark of many solid tumors and is associated with resistance to anticancer treatments. Hypoxia-activated prodrugs (HAPs) were developed to target the hypoxic regions of these tumors. Among 2nd generation HAPs, Evofosfamide (Evo, also known as TH-302) exhibits preclinical and clinical activities against adult glioblastoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntioxid Redox Signal
October 2021
Radiation Biology Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
In hypoxic tumor microenvironments, the strongly reducing redox environment reduces evofosfamide (TH-302) to release a cytotoxic bromo-isophosphoramide (Br-IPM) moiety. This drug therefore preferentially attacks hypoxic regions in tumors where other standard anticancer treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation therapy are often ineffective. Various combination therapies with evofosfamide have been proposed and tested in preclinical and clinical settings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!