ID | 115036 |
Author |
Ando, Hidenori
Tokushima University
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Fukushima, Masakazu
Tokushima University|Delta‐Fly Pharma
Eshima, Kiyoshi
Delta‐Fly Pharma
Hasui, Taichi
Tokushima University
Huang, Cheng‐Long
Kyoto University
Wada, Hiromi
Kyoto University
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Keywords | DFP‐10825
gastric cancer
peritoneal dissemination
RNAi therapeutic
S‐1
thymidylate synthase (TS)
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | Purpose: In advanced gastric cancer, peritoneal dissemination is a life‐threatening mode of metastasis. Since the treatment options with conventional chemotherapy remain limited, any novel therapeutic strategy that could control such metastasis would improve the outcome of treatment. We recently developed a unique RNA interference therapeutic regimen (DFP‐10825) consisting of short hairpin RNA against thymidylate synthase (TS shRNA) and cationic liposomes. The treatment with DFP‐10825 has shown remarkable antitumor activity in peritoneally disseminated human ovarian cancer–bearing mice via intraperitoneal administration. In this study, we expanded DFP‐10825 to the treatment of peritoneally disseminated gastric cancer.
Methods: DFP‐10825 was administered intraperitoneally into mice with intraperitoneally implanted human gastric cancer cells (MKN45 or NCI‐N87). Antitumor activity and host survival benefits were monitored. Intraperitoneal distribution of fluorescence‐labeled DFP‐10825 was monitored in this MKN45 peritoneally disseminated mouse model. Results: Intraperitoneal injection of DFP‐10825 suppressed tumor growth in two peritoneally disseminated cancer models (MKN45 and NCI‐N87) and increased the survival time of the MKN45 model without severe side effects. Throughout the treatment regimen, no significant body weight loss was associated with the administration of DFP‐10825. Interestingly, after intraperitoneal injection, fluorescence‐labeled DFP‐10825 retained for more than 72 hours in the peritoneal cavity and selectively accumulated in disseminated tumors. Conclusions: Intraperitoneal injection of DFP‐10825 demonstrated effective antitumor activity without systemic severe adverse effects via the selective delivery of RNAi molecules into disseminated tumors in the peritoneal cavity. Our current study indicates that DFP‐10825 could become an alternative option to improve the outcomes of patients with peritoneally disseminated gastric cancer. |
Journal Title |
Cancer Medicine
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ISSN | 20457634
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Publisher | John Wiley & Sons
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Volume | 8
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Issue | 17
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Start Page | 7313
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End Page | 7321
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Published Date | 2019-10-14
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Rights | This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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language |
eng
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Publisher
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departments |
Pharmaceutical Sciences
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