Digoxin treatment reactivates in vivo radioactive iodide uptake and correlates with favorable clinical outcome in non‐medullary thyroid cancer

Purpose Non-medullary thyroid cancer (NMTC) treatment is based on the ability of thyroid follicular cells to accumulate radioactive iodide (RAI). However, in a subset of NMTC patients tumor dedifferentiation occurs, leading to RAI resistance. Digoxin has been demonstrated to restore iodide uptake ca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cellular oncology (Dordrecht) 2021-06, Vol.44 (3), p.611-625
Hauptverfasser: Crezee, Thomas, Tesselaar, Marika H., Nagarajah, James, Corver, Willem E., Morreau, Johannes, Pritchard, Catrin, Kimura, Shioko, Kuiper, Josephina G., van Engen-van Grunsven, Ilse, Smit, Jan W. A., Netea-Maier, Romana T., Plantinga, Theo S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose Non-medullary thyroid cancer (NMTC) treatment is based on the ability of thyroid follicular cells to accumulate radioactive iodide (RAI). However, in a subset of NMTC patients tumor dedifferentiation occurs, leading to RAI resistance. Digoxin has been demonstrated to restore iodide uptake capacity in vitro in poorly differentiated and anaplastic NMTC cells, termed redifferentiation. The aim of the present study was to investigate the in vivo effects of digoxin in TPO-Cre/LSL-Braf V600E mice and digoxin-treated NMTC patients. Methods Mice with thyroid cancer were subjected to 3D ultrasound for monitoring tumor growth and 124 I PET/CT for measurement of intratumoral iodide uptake. Post-mortem analyses on tumor tissues comprised gene expression profiling and measurement of intratumoral autophagy activity. Through PALGA (Dutch Pathology Registry), archived tumor material was obtained from 11 non-anaplastic NMTC patients who were using digoxin. Clinical characteristics and tumor material of these patients were compared to 11 matched control NMTC patients never treated with digoxin. Results We found that in mice, tumor growth was inhibited and 124 I accumulation was sustainably increased after short-course digoxin treatment. Post-mortem analyses revealed that digoxin treatment increased autophagy activity and enhanced expression of thyroid-specific genes in mouse tumors compared to vehicle-treated mice. Digoxin-treated NMTC patients exhibited significantly higher autophagy activity and a higher differentiation status as compared to matched control NMTC patients, and were associated with favourable clinical outcome. Conclusions These in vivo data support the hypothesis that digoxin may represent a repositioned adjunctive treatment modality that suppresses tumor growth and improves RAI sensitivity in patients with RAI-refractory NMTC.
ISSN:2211-3428
2211-3436
DOI:10.1007/s13402-021-00588-y