Zaleskis Gintaras, Garberytė Sima, Pavliukevičienė Božena, Valinčius Gintaras, Characiejus Dainius, Mauricas Mykolas, Kraśko Jan Aleksander, Žilionytė Karolina, Žvirblė Margarita, Pašukonienė Vita
Laboratory of Immunology, National Cancer Institute, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Department of Immunology, State Research Institute Centre for Innovative Medicine, Vilnius, Lithuania.
J Cancer. 2020 Sep 19;11(22):6497-6506. doi: 10.7150/jca.46066. eCollection 2020.
Chemotherapy resistance of malignancies is a universal phenomenon which unfavorably affects therapeutic results. Genetic adaptations as well as epigenetic factors can play an important role in the development of multidrug resistance. Cytotoxic drug content in plasma of cancer patients is known to variate up to one hundred-fold regardless of the same dose injected per m body surface. The relationship between plasma concentrations, tissue uptake, and chemotherapy response is not completely understood. The main objective of this study was to investigate how the identical dose of Doxorubicin (Dox) can result in a different therapeutic response pattern depending on tumor size. The study was performed on ascitic EL4 lymphoma in an exponential growth phase focusing on the rapidly changing tumor susceptibility to the Dox treatment. Well distinguishable tumor response patterns (curability, remission-relapse, resistance) were selected to unveil Dox intratumoral uptake and drug tissue persistence. Intratumoral Dox content within peritoneal cavity (PerC) in conjunction with systemic toxicity and plasma pharmacokinetics, were monitored at several time points following Dox injection in tumor bearing mice (TBM) with differing patterns of response. Following intraperitoneal (i.p.) transplantation of 5x10 EL4 lymphoma cells rapid exponential proliferation with ascites volume and animal mass increase resulted in median survival of 14.5 days. The increase in tumor cell mass in PerC between day 3 and day 9 was 112.5-fold (0.2±0.03 mg vs 22.5±0.31 mg respectively). However, tumors at this time interval (day 3 to day 9 post-transplantation) were relatively small and constituted less than 0.05% of animal weight. An identical dose of Dox (15 mg/kg) injected intravenously (i.v.) on Day 3 lead to a cure whereas a TBM injected on day 9 exhibited resistance with a median survival time no different from the untreated TBM control. Injection of Dox resulted in noticeable differences of cellular uptake in PerC between all three groups of TBM ("cure", relapse", "resistance"). Larger tumors were consistently taking up less Dox 60 min after the 15 mg/kg i.v. bolus injection. Higher initial uptake resulted also in longer retention of drug in PerC cells. The area under the concentration curve in PerC cells AUC was 8.2±0.57 µg/g x h, 4.6±0.27 µg/g x h and 1.6±0.02 µg/g x h in "cure", "relapse" and "resistance" TBM respectively (<0.05 "relapse" vs "cure" and <0.001 "resistance" vs "cure"). No differences in plasma Dox pharmacokinetics or systemic hematological effects were observed in TBM following a single i.v. Dox push. Hematologic nadir was tested on day 2 and subsequent hematologic recovery was evaluated on day 10 following Dox administration. Hematologic recovery on day 10 coincided with complete drug efflux from PerC and rising tumor cell numbers in PerC of "relapse" TBM. Myelosuppression and hematological recovery patterns were identical in all surviving animal groups regardless of the tumor size on the day of Dox injection. Within a few days of exponential tumor growth, an identical dose of Dox produced dramatically different responses in the TBM with increasing resistance. Systemic toxicity and plasma pharmacokinetics were indistinguishable between all TBM groups. Initial uptake in tumor cells was found to be consistently lower in larger tumors. Drug uptake in tumor cells was regulated locally - a phenomenon known as inoculum effect . The duration of drug retention in cells was directly related to initial cellular uptake. The magnitude of Dox cellular retention could potentially play a role in determining tumor remission and relapse.
恶性肿瘤的化疗耐药是一种普遍现象,对治疗结果产生不利影响。基因适应性以及表观遗传因素在多药耐药的发展中可发挥重要作用。已知癌症患者血浆中的细胞毒性药物含量变化可达百倍,尽管每平方米体表面积注射的剂量相同。血浆浓度、组织摄取与化疗反应之间的关系尚未完全明确。本研究的主要目的是调查相同剂量的多柔比星(Dox)如何根据肿瘤大小导致不同的治疗反应模式。该研究在处于指数生长期的腹水型EL4淋巴瘤上进行,重点关注肿瘤对Dox治疗的易感性快速变化情况。选择易于区分的肿瘤反应模式(治愈、缓解 - 复发、耐药)来揭示Dox在肿瘤内的摄取和药物在组织中的持久性。在给具有不同反应模式的荷瘤小鼠(TBM)注射Dox后的几个时间点,监测腹腔内(PerC)的肿瘤内Dox含量以及全身毒性和血浆药代动力学。经腹腔(i.p.)移植5×10个EL4淋巴瘤细胞后,随着腹水体积和动物体重增加快速指数增殖,中位生存期为14.5天。第3天至第9天PerC中肿瘤细胞质量增加了112.5倍(分别为0.2±0.03毫克和22.5±0.31毫克)。然而,在此时间间隔(移植后第3天至第9天)肿瘤相对较小,占动物体重不到0.05%。在第3天静脉内(i.v.)注射相同剂量的Dox(15毫克/千克)可导致治愈,而在第9天注射的TBM表现出耐药性,中位生存时间与未治疗的TBM对照组无差异。注射Dox导致所有三组TBM(“治愈”、“复发”、“耐药”)的PerC中细胞摄取存在明显差异。在静脉推注15毫克/千克后60分钟,较大的肿瘤始终摄取较少的Dox。较高的初始摄取也导致药物在PerC细胞中的保留时间更长。PerC细胞中浓度曲线下面积(AUC)在“治愈”、“复发”和“耐药”TBM中分别为8.2±0.57微克/克×小时、4.6±0.27微克/克×小时和1.6±0.02微克/克×小时(“复发”与“治愈”相比P<0.05;“耐药”与“治愈”相比P<0.001)。在单次静脉推注Dox后TBM的血浆Dox药代动力学或全身血液学效应未观察到差异。在给药后第2天测试血液学最低点,并在第10天评估随后的血液学恢复情况。第10天的血液学恢复与PerC中药物完全排出以及“复发”TBM的PerC中肿瘤细胞数量增加同时发生。所有存活动物组的骨髓抑制和血液学恢复模式相同,无论Dox注射当天肿瘤大小如何。在肿瘤指数生长的几天内,相同剂量的Dox在TBM中产生了显著不同的反应,耐药性增加。所有TBM组之间的全身毒性和血浆药代动力学无差异。发现较大肿瘤中肿瘤细胞的初始摄取始终较低。肿瘤细胞中的药物摄取受局部调节 - 这一现象称为接种效应。药物在细胞中的保留时间与初始细胞摄取直接相关。Dox细胞保留的程度可能在决定肿瘤缓解和复发中起作用。