Effectiveness of Mesothelioma Drug Improved by Other Compounds |
Two new studies suggest that a popular mesothelioma drug becomes more effective when combined with other compounds.
Pemetrexed (Alimta) is considered a gold standard chemotherapy treatment for mesothelioma, a cancer of the membrane that surrounds the lungs and other internal organs. For mesothelioma, pemetrexed is frequently combined with the platinum-based agent, cisplatin. Although many drugs interact with each other or trigger drug resistance, there has been little study of the interaction between these two key mesothelioma drugs.
To better understand the relationship between pemetrexed and cisplatin, a team of Japanese researchers used the combination to treat mesothelioma cells in the lab. Although the team did find resistance to either pemetrexed or cisplatin in the mesothelioma cell lines they tested, they confirmed that the combination of the two drugs is still viable in most cases. "Cisplatin and pemetrexed showed synergistic activity and no cross-resistance in 3 of the 4 malignant pleural mesothelioma cell lines, suggesting the clinical relevance of their combination in chemotherapy," concluded the research team. Their results appear in a recent issue of Oncology Reports.
A second study of pemetrexed suggests the drug might have a stronger anti-tumor effect when combined with compounds that release nitric oxide. This team, also based in Japan, used two types of nitric oxide-producing compounds (called nitric oxide donors) for their tests: NOC-18 and nitroglycerin (GTN).
To study the impact of these compounds on pemetrexed, they injected 100 nM of NOC-18 for 3 days into mice with lung cancer who'd been treated with pemetrexed. They report that the NOC-18 "significantly enhanced PEM-induced cytotoxicity" and increased the expression of other anti-tumor compounds in the cells. Adding nitroglycerin to the mix further enhanced the effect. "Combination therapy with GTN and PEM significantly reduced tumor growth compared with PEM alone in the syngraft model," wrote the Kyoto University-based team.
Released in 2004 under the brand name Alimta, pemetrexed was the first drug approved specifically for mesothelioma. It is also used to treat non-small cell lung cancer. Pemetrexed is a folate antimetabolite that works by inhibiting certain key enzymes, preventing the formation of DNA and RNA critical for cell growth and survival.
Sources:
Kitazono-Saitoh, M et al, "interaction and cross-resistance of cisplatin and pemetrexed in malignant mesothelioma cell lines", July 2012, Oncology Reports, Epub ahead of print.
Nagai, H et al, "Nitric oxide (NO) enhances pemetrexed cytotoxicity via NO-cGMP signaling in lung adenocarcinoma cells in vitro and in vivo", July 2012, International Journal of Oncology, Epub ahead of print.
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