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Experimental Therapeutics, Preclinical Pharmacology |
The CRC Centre for Cancer Therapeutics, Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Surrey SM2 5NG, United Kingdom
Raltitrexed (RTX) is an antifolate thymidylate synthase (TS) inhibitor that is effective for the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer and other solid tumors. However, a small minority of patients receiving RTX monotherapy will experience grade III/IV gastrointestinal toxicity that can be life-threatening, particularly if copresenting with neutropenia. Lack of vigilance in recognition and treatment of symptoms of toxicity or violations of protocol have led to treatment-related deaths in some hospitals. The safety of RTX could be improved if an effective rescue agent was available. Leucovorin (LV) is a reduced folate cofactor that competes with RTX for transport and polyglutamation in both tumor and normal tissues and thus has potential as a rescue agent. In vitro cell studies are presented suggesting that the growth-inhibitory, and potentially cytotoxic, effects of RTX on populations of viable cells can be reversed by the delayed administration of LV. The mechanisms involved are inhibition of further drug uptake and polyglutamation and a redistribution and/or reduction in the concentration of preformed raltitrexed polyglutamates. A more clinically relevant in vivo mouse model was used to test the hypothesis further. BALB/c mice treated with 100 mg/kg/day x 4 days of RTX were used as a model for gastrointestinal and bone marrow toxicity. LV (200 mg/kg), which was given after the onset of severe weight loss and diarrhea (twice daily, days 57), prevented further weight loss and induced earlier recovery. This was accompanied by improvement in the histological appearance of the intestine (day 7) and the concentration of neutrophils and platelets in the blood (day 9). BALB/c mice could not tolerate 100 mg/kg daily x 5 days unless LV (200 mg/kg twice daily) was given on days 68. Measurement of RTX (polyglutamates) by RIA after 100 mg/kg RTX daily (days 14) showed less drug in plasma (34-fold), liver (811-fold), kidney (34-fold), and small intestinal epithelium (34-fold) on day 7 in LV-treated mice (100 or 200 mg/kg twice daily) compared with controls. A single injection of 100 mg/kg RTX (day 1) gave plasma levels of 34 pmol/ml on day 4 that are more clinically relevant. Administration of LV (100 or 200 mg/kg; twice daily on days 46) reduced the RTX concentration in the liver 24-fold on days 7, 9, and 11 compared with controls. A model is proposed where LV and/or its anabolic products can compete with RTX uptake into tissues and interfere with the homeostatic regulation of RTX polyglutamates. These data support the use of LV rescue in the small minority of patients treated with RTX who present with a severe pattern of antiproliferative toxicities. The use of LV is not recommended routinely because the antitumor activity of RTX may similarly be reversed.
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E. Van Cutsem, D. Cunningham, J. Maroun, A. Cervantes, and B. Glimelius Raltitrexed: current clinical status and future directions Ann. Onc., April 1, 2002; 13(4): 513 - 522. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. M. Pritchard, L. Bower, C. S. Potten, A. L. Jackman, and J. A. Hickman The Importance of p53-Independent Apoptosis in the Intestinal Toxicity Induced by Raltitrexed (ZD1694, Tomudex): Genetic Differences between BALB/c and DBA/2 Mice Clin. Cancer Res., November 1, 2000; 6(11): 4389 - 4395. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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