Giai M, Biglia N, Sismondi P
Institute of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Turin, Italy.
Eur J Gynaecol Oncol. 1991;12(5):359-73.
Resistance to multiple chemotherapeutic agents is a common clinical problem in the treatment of cancer: such resistance may occur in primary therapy or be acquired during treatment. The most commonly used antineoplastic agents in the treatment of disseminated breast cancer are adriamycin, methotrexate and cyclophosphamide. Cell lines selected for resistance to adriamycin often develop cross-resistance to structurally dissimilar antineoplastic drugs with different mechanisms of cytotoxic action; this phenomenon has been called pleiotropic or multidrug resistance (MDR). In vitro models of MDR have shown that this type of resistance is accompanied by a decrease in cellular drug accumulation, mediated by the over-expression of a 170 kD plasma membrane glycoprotein referred to as P170. Glycoprotein P170 is an energy-dependent multidrug efflux pump, whose activity can be inhibited in vitro by a variety of agents including verapamil, quinidine and reserpine. P170 is over-expressed also in some human malignancies, and evidence exists about its role in examples of clinical resistance in vitro. Clinical trials using verapamil, a calcium channel blocker which selectively enhances drug cytotoxicity in MDR cell lines, have been prompted for leukemia and ovarian cancer. In addition other approaches are the subject of current preclinical investigations. Several observations as well the phenomenon of "atypical" MDR in cell lines which do not overexpress P170, suggest that also other factors are involved in multidrug resistance. Qualitative or quantitative changes in the activity of topoisomerases, protein kinase-related systems and glutathione S-transferase, may confer pleiotropic resistance. As the role of these genes and their regulation is clarified, they may also serve as useful targets for pharmacologic intervention in the treatment of drug-resistant human tumors. The mechanisms involved in resistance to methotrexate and cyclophosphamide are less studied, particularly in vivo samples. Methotrexate resistance is probably a complex multifactorial phenomenon; in some cases it is due to an increase in the expression of the drug target dihydrofolate reductase, often as a result of gene amplification, but in other cases a transport defect of the methotrexate or alterations of the activity of different enzymes have been reported. Cyclophosphamide (CP) resistance has been attributed to an increased activity of two different enzymes, glutathione S-transferase, also involved in MDR phenotype, and aldehyde dehydrogenase, which catalyzes inactivation of CP in non cytotoxic metabolites. This paper reviews the current state of our knowledge of chemo-resistance and the utility of available markers to identify potentially resistant tumors in vivo; the strategies that might be used to overcome this phenomenon are also described.
这种耐药性可能在初始治疗时就已出现,也可能在治疗过程中产生。在转移性乳腺癌治疗中最常用的抗肿瘤药物是阿霉素、甲氨蝶呤和环磷酰胺。选择对阿霉素耐药的细胞系通常会对结构不同、细胞毒性作用机制各异的抗肿瘤药物产生交叉耐药性;这种现象被称为多向性或多药耐药性(MDR)。多药耐药性的体外模型表明,这种类型的耐药性伴随着细胞内药物蓄积的减少,这是由一种称为P170的170 kD质膜糖蛋白过度表达介导的。糖蛋白P170是一种能量依赖性多药外排泵,其活性在体外可被多种药物抑制,包括维拉帕米、奎尼丁和利血平。P170在一些人类恶性肿瘤中也过度表达,并且有证据表明其在体外临床耐药实例中的作用。针对白血病和卵巢癌已开展了使用维拉帕米(一种钙通道阻滞剂,可选择性增强多药耐药细胞系中的药物细胞毒性)的临床试验。此外,其他方法也是当前临床前研究的主题。一些观察结果以及在未过度表达P170的细胞系中出现的“非典型”多药耐药现象表明,还有其他因素参与了多药耐药。拓扑异构酶、蛋白激酶相关系统和谷胱甘肽S -转移酶活性的定性或定量变化可能导致多向性耐药。随着这些基因及其调控作用的阐明,它们也可能成为治疗耐药性人类肿瘤时药物干预的有用靶点。对甲氨蝶呤和环磷酰胺耐药机制的研究较少,尤其是在体内样本中。甲氨蝶呤耐药可能是一个复杂的多因素现象;在某些情况下,这是由于药物靶点二氢叶酸还原酶的表达增加,通常是基因扩增的结果,但在其他情况下,也有报道称存在甲氨蝶呤转运缺陷或不同酶活性改变。环磷酰胺(CP)耐药归因于两种不同酶活性的增加,一种是也参与多药耐药表型的谷胱甘肽S -转移酶,另一种是催化CP失活为非细胞毒性代谢产物的醛脱氢酶。本文综述了我们目前对化疗耐药性的认识现状以及用于在体内识别潜在耐药肿瘤的现有标志物的实用性;还描述了可能用于克服这一现象的策略。