Gutheil J C, Campbell T N, Pierce P R, Watkins J D, Huse W D, Bodkin D J, Cheresh D A
Department of Clinical Oncology Research, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, San Diego, California 92121, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2000 Aug;6(8):3056-61.
Angiogenesis plays a central role in the growth and metastasis of cancers. Strategies aimed at interfering with tumor blood supply offer promise for new cancer therapies. Vitaxin (an anti-alphavbeta3 antibody) interferes with blood vessel formation by inducing apoptosis in newly generated endothelial cells. This Phase I study evaluates the safety and pharmacokinetics of Vitaxin in humans with cancer. Eligible patients demonstrated progressive tumors with stage IV disease and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status < or =2. Treatment consisted of six weekly infusions of Vitaxin. Escalating doses from 0.1 and 4.0 mg/kg/week were evaluated based on the expectation that plasma levels would bracket the effective in vitro concentration. Escalation beyond 4 mg/kg/week was limited by drug availability. Adverse events were assessed weekly. Pharmacokinetics were performed weekly through week 9. Clinical response was assessed at week 9. Of 17 patients treated, 14 were evaluable for response. Treatment was well tolerated with little or no toxicity. The most common side effect was infusion-related fever, which could be controlled with prophylactic antipyretics. Doses > or =1 mg/kg/week produced plasma concentrations sufficient to saturate the alphavbeta3 receptor in vitro (25 microg/ml). Vitaxin demonstrated a half-life in excess of 5 days at higher doses with no accumulation over 6 weeks of therapy. One patient demonstrated a partial response, and seven patients demonstrated stable disease. Three patients received Vitaxin beyond the first cycle of therapy. Each of these patients demonstrated disease stabilization that in one case lasted 22 months. At the doses and schedule studied, Vitaxin appears safe and potentially active, suggesting that vascular integrin alphavbeta3 represents a clinically relevant antiangiogenic target for prolonged cancer therapy.
血管生成在癌症的生长和转移过程中起着核心作用。旨在干扰肿瘤血液供应的策略为新型癌症治疗带来了希望。Vitaxin(一种抗αvβ3抗体)通过诱导新生内皮细胞凋亡来干扰血管形成。这项I期研究评估了Vitaxin在癌症患者中的安全性和药代动力学。符合条件的患者表现为IV期疾病且肿瘤进展,东部肿瘤协作组体能状态≤2。治疗包括每周一次共六次输注Vitaxin。基于血浆水平将涵盖体外有效浓度的预期,评估了从0.1至4.0mg/kg/周的递增剂量。超过4mg/kg/周的剂量递增受药物可获得性限制。每周评估不良事件。在第9周之前每周进行药代动力学研究。在第9周评估临床反应。17例接受治疗的患者中,14例可评估反应。治疗耐受性良好,几乎没有或没有毒性。最常见的副作用是与输注相关的发热,可用预防性退烧药控制。剂量≥1mg/kg/周可产生足以在体外饱和αvβ3受体(25μg/ml)的血浆浓度。Vitaxin在较高剂量下半衰期超过5天,在6周治疗期间无蓄积。1例患者表现出部分缓解,7例患者疾病稳定。3例患者在第一个治疗周期后继续接受Vitaxin治疗。这些患者均表现出疾病稳定,其中1例持续了22个月。在所研究的剂量和方案下,Vitaxin似乎安全且可能具有活性,这表明血管整合素αvβ3是延长癌症治疗的临床相关抗血管生成靶点。