1,005 research outputs found

    In vivo interaction of anti-cancer drugs with misonidazole or metronidazole: cyclophosphamide and BCNU.

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    The addition of misonidazole (MISO) or metronidazole (METRO) to treatment with cyclophosphamide (CY) increased delay to regrowth of 2 experimental tumours. The effect was observed for large an small tumours, was present for doses of MISO that are ineffective for killing hypoxic cells, and required that it be given with, or shortly before CY. Mice receiving combined treatment had more weight loss and myelosuppression than those receiving CY alone, and the Therapeutic Index was lower. MISO caused a marked increase in growth delay when combined with BCNU to treat the KHT sarcoma. This effect was observed for small and large tumours, required simultaneous administration of drugs, and also led to increased host toxicity. There was no therapeutic advantage from combined treatment. Survival of aerobic or anoxic Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells was assessed after exposure in vitro to serum from mice that had received CY or BCNU alone. MISO alone, or combined treatment. Results of these experiments suggest that (1) MISO delays the excretion or breakdown of active metabolites of CY, and (2) at a dose that does not kill hypoxic cells, it may selectively "sensitize" hypoxic cells (but not aerobic cells) to the action of BCNU. The presence of other undetermined interactions of BCNU and MISO is inferred from the increased toxicity to (aerobic) normal tissue. Misonidazole or metronidazole should be used with caution in patients who are receiving BCNU or cyclophosphamide

    Evidence against apoptosis as a major mechanism for reproductive cell death following treatment of cell lines with anti-cancer drugs

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    An increase in apoptotic cells may be observed after treatment with chemotherapy, and many authors have assumed that anti-cancer drugs kill cells by inducing apoptosis. The most relevant endpoint of cell death following treatment of tumour cells is loss of reproductive ability as measured by a colony-forming assay, since cells with limited reproductive potential cannot regenerate a tumour. We have therefore investigated the relationship between apoptosis and reproductive cell death following in vitro treatment of mammalian cell lines with anti-cancer drugs. Markers of apoptosis (DNA ladders, TUNEL assay) were evaluated at various times after treatment of Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells, human bladder cancer MGH-U1 cells, and a murine T-lymphocytic cell line (CTLL-2) with several anti-cancer drugs. These markers were found infrequently, despite the use of doses that cause loss of colony-forming ability, except in CTLL-2 cells. We also transfected and expressed the human pro-apoptotic gene bax and the anti-apoptotic gene bcl-2 in MGH-U1 cells and compared cell survival after drug treatment with that of control cells transfected with the vector alone. Expression of these genes had at most small effects to influence cell survival. We conclude that apoptotic mechanisms had at most a minor role in leading to reproductive death of MGH-U1 and CHO cells after chemotherapy. When apoptosis is observed following treatment with anti-cancer drugs it may be a secondary event which occurs in lethally-damaged cells, leading to their lysis, rather than a primary event that leads to loss of reproductive integrity. Β© 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co
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