Overcoming radioresistance with the hypoxia-activated prodrug CP-506: A pre-clinical study of local tumour control probability

•CP-506 is a novel hypoxia-activated prodrug with broad anti-tumour activity.•CP-506 significantly improved local tumour control when combined with single dose radiation in contrast to fractionated radiotherapy.•The magnitude of the therapeutic effect depends on the tumour model, highlighting the ne...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiotherapy and oncology 2023-09, Vol.186, p.109738-109738, Article 109738
Hauptverfasser: Yaromina, Ala, Koi, Lydia, Schuitmaker, Lesley, van der Wiel, Alexander Marie-Madeleine Adrianus, Dubois, Ludwig Jerome, Krause, Mechthild, Lambin, Philippe
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•CP-506 is a novel hypoxia-activated prodrug with broad anti-tumour activity.•CP-506 significantly improved local tumour control when combined with single dose radiation in contrast to fractionated radiotherapy.•The magnitude of the therapeutic effect depends on the tumour model, highlighting the need for appropriate patients stratification strategies not only limited to the hypoxia evaluation. Tumour hypoxia is an established radioresistance factor. A novel hypoxia-activated prodrug CP-506 has been proven to selectively target hypoxic tumour cells and to cause anti-tumour activity. The current study investigates whether CP-506 improves outcome of radiotherapy in vivo. Mice bearing FaDu and UT-SCC-5 xenografts were randomized to receive 5 daily injections of CP-506/vehicle followed by single dose (SD) irradiation. In addition, CP-506 was combined once per week with fractionated irradiation (30 fractions/6 weeks). Animals were followed-up to score all recurrences. In parallel, tumours were harvested to evaluate pimonidazole hypoxia, DNA damage (γH2AX), expression of oxidoreductases. CP-506 treatment significantly increased local control rate after SD in FaDu, 62% vs. 27% (p = 0.024). In UT-SCC-5, this effect was not curative and only marginally significant. CP-506 induced significant DNA damage in FaDu (p = 0.009) but not in UT- SCC-5. Hypoxic volume (HV) was significantly smaller (p = 0.038) after pretreatment with CP-506 as compared to vehicle in FaDu but not in less responsive UT-SCC-5. Adding CP-506 to fractionated radiotherapy in FaDu did not result in significant benefit. The results support the use of CP-506 in combination with radiation in particular using hypofractionation schedules in hypoxic tumours. The magnitude of effect depends on the tumour model, therefore it is expected that applying appropriate patient stratification strategy will further enhance the benefit of CP-506 treatment for cancer patients. A phase I-IIA clinical trial of CP-506 in monotherapy or in combination with carboplatin or a checkpoint inhibitor has been approved (NCT04954599).
ISSN:0167-8140
1879-0887
DOI:10.1016/j.radonc.2023.109738