Fibrinogen-Coated Droplets of Olive Oil for Delivery of Docetaxel to a Fibrin(ogen)-Rich Ascites Form of a Murine Mammary Tumor
Micronized droplets of olive oil loaded with docetaxel and coated with functional fibrinogen were administered intraperitoneally to mice bearing the fibrin(ogen)-rich ascites form of the TA3/St mammary tumor. When compared with docetaxel administered intraperitoneally as its commercial formulation (...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2004-10, Vol.10 (20), p.7001-7010 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Micronized droplets of olive oil loaded with docetaxel and coated with functional fibrinogen were administered intraperitoneally
to mice bearing the fibrin(ogen)-rich ascites form of the TA3/St mammary tumor. When compared with docetaxel administered
intraperitoneally as its commercial formulation ( i.e. , Taxotere), docetaxel-loaded oil droplets coated with murine fibrinogen prolonged the median survival time of tumor-bearing
mice from 14.5 to 29.5 days. Drug-free oil droplets provided no therapeutic benefit. Significantly more docetaxel was associated
with tumor cells 24 and 48 hours after administration of the drug in fibrinogen-coated oil droplets than after its administration
as Taxotere. Consistent with a role for thrombin in the retention of fibrinogen-coated oil droplets within the tumor microenvironment,
hirudin significantly reduced the association of tumor cells with docetaxel delivered in fibrinogen-coated oil droplets and,
at the same time, reduced the therapeutic efficacy of the droplets to that of Taxotere. Importantly, fibrinogen-coated oil
droplets formed rosettes with tumor cells in vivo , a process prevented by hirudin. Although mice treated with oil droplets developed antifibrinogen antibodies, those antibodies
seemed to be inconsequential. Taken together, our results and observations indicate fibrinogen-coated oil droplets markedly
improve the therapeutic efficacy of docetaxel for the treatment of a mammary tumor grown in ascites form, a consequence of
thrombin-mediated retention of the drug-loaded droplets within the tumor microenvironment. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-04-0118 |