Increased therapeutic effect on metastatic liver tumors in rats of two-route chemotherapy using cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) and its antidote, sodium thiosulfate, with temporary clamping of the abdominal aorta.
Journal: 1990/August - Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology
ISSN: 0344-5704
PUBMED: 2357764
Abstract:
To improve the therapeutic effects of conventional "two-route chemotherapy" (TRC) comprising cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (CDDP) given via the hepatic artery plus simultaneous i.v. sodium thiosulfate (STS) on metastatic liver tumors in rats, we combined TRC with aortic clamping at the supraceliac level. Treatments were evaluated in Wistar-King-Aptekman (WKA) rats bearing metastatic liver tumors 7 days after the inoculation of 10(6) syngenic RBT-1 (transitional-cell carcinoma) cells via the mesenteric vein. When 15 mg/kg CDDP was injected i.a. over 5 min, immediately followed by STS 1,580 mg/kg (200-fold the molar equivalent of 15 mg/kg CDDP) given i.v. over a further 5 min, the antitumor activity, evaluated by the number of tumor nodules present 12 days after treatment, was superior to that of conventional TRC (15 mg/kg i.a. CDDP plus simultaneous administration of 1,580 mg/kg i.v. STS), but the blood urea nitrogen (BUN) level was highly elevated (63.6 mg/dl). With aortic clamping for 7.5 min during CDDP administration and the first half of STS treatment, the TRC consisting of CDDP plus delayed STS (modified TRC) exhibited a further improvement in antitumor activity, with no nephrotoxicity (BUN, 17.1 mg/dl). Although the antitumor activity of 3 or 5 mg/kg i.a. CDDP was also increased by aortic clamping, in animals with normal BUN levels the survival of those treated with modified TRC was greater than that of rodents given 3 mg/kg i.a. CDDP with aortic clamping; however, the former was the same as that of animals given 5 mg/kg i.a. CDDP with aortic clamping whose BUN levels were elevated (31.2 mg/dl). Loss of body weight, the decrease in WBC counts, and changes in the serum transaminase levels in rats given modified TRC were tolerable. The improved therapeutic effect of modified TRC can be explained as follows: during aortic clamping, (a) CDDP delivery to the kidney decreased by 96% and made feasible the delay in STS administration after CDDP without nephrotoxicity, and (b) CDDP retention in the liver was increased by 366%, as aortic clamping decreased the portal blood flow, thereby inhibiting the washout of CDDP from the liver.
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