Trail P A, Willner D, Bianchi A B, Henderson A J, TrailSmith M D, Girit E, Lasch S, Hellström I, Hellström K E
Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Princeton, New Jersey 08543, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 1999 Nov;5(11):3632-8.
The efficacy of chemotherapy has been improved by regimens that combine several cytotoxic drugs with different mechanisms of action and/or different dose-limiting toxicities. Here we demonstrate clearly, and for the first time, that combined therapy using an anticarcinoma immunoconjugate, BR96-doxorubicin, and the cytotoxic drug paclitaxel results in a significant increase in antitumor activity over that of either agent alone. Synergistic activity was seen at doses of BR96-doxorubicin that were minimally active as single agents. A dramatic increase in regression rates was seen when a regimen that combined BR96-doxorubicin and paclitaxel was used to treat both paclitaxel-sensitive and paclitaxel-insensitive carcinomas. Importantly, combined therapy resulted in increased antitumor activity against lung, colon, and breast tumors xenografted in athymic mice and large, paclitaxel-insensitive colon tumors xenografted in athymic rats that also express the Lewis(y) target antigen in normal tissues.