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Hypoxia-Targeting Drug Evofosfamide (TH-302) Enhances Sunitinib Activity in Neuroblastoma Xenograft Models
Authors:Sushil Kumar  Jessica D Sun  Libo Zhang  Reza Bayat Mokhtari  Bing Wu  Fanying Meng  Qian Liu  Deepthi Bhupathi  Yan Wang  Herman Yeger  Charles Hart  Sylvain Baruchel
Institution:2. Institute of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Medical Sciences Building, 1 King’s College Circle, Room 2374, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 1A8;3. Threshold Pharmaceuticals Inc., 170 Harbor Way # 300, South San Francisco, CA, USA, 94080;4. Department of Pediatric Laboratory Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, 686 Bay St, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5G 0A4,
Abstract:Antiangiogenic therapy has shown promising results in preclinical and clinical trials. However, tumor cells acquire resistance to this therapy by gaining ability to survive and proliferate under hypoxia induced by antiangiogenic therapy. Combining antiangiogenic therapy with hypoxia-activated prodrugs can overcome this limitation. Here, we have tested the combination of antiangiogenic drug sunitinib in combination with hypoxia-activated prodrug evofosfamide in neuroblastoma. In vitro, neuroblastoma cell line SK-N-BE(2) was 40-folds sensitive to evofosfamide under hypoxia compared to normoxia. In IV metastatic model, evofosfamide significantly increased mice survival compared to the vehicle (P=.02). In SK-N-BE(2) subcutaneous xenograft model, we tested two different treatment regimens using 30 mg/kg sunitinib and 50 mg/kg evofosfamide. Here, sunitinib therapy when started along with evofosfamide treatment showed higher efficacy compared to single agents in subcutaneous SK-N-BE(2) xenograft model, whereas sunitinib when started 7 days after evofosfamide treatment did not have any advantage compared to treatment with either single agent. Immunofluorescence of tumor sections revealed higher number of apoptotic cells and hypoxic areas compared to either single agent when both treatments were started together. Treatment with 80 mg/kg sunitinib with 50 mg/kg evofosfamide was significantly superior to single agents in both xenograft and metastatic models. This study confirms the preclinical efficacy of sunitinib and evofosfamide in murine models of aggressive neuroblastoma. Sunitinib enhances the efficacy of evofosfamide by increasing hypoxic areas, and evofosfamide targets hypoxic tumor cells. Consequently, each drug enhances the activity of the other.
Keywords:Address all correspondence to: Sylvain Baruchel  MD  The Hospital for Sick Children  Division of Haematology/Oncology  555 University Avenue  Toronto  Ontario  Canada  M5G 1X8  
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