5--oleoyl-cytarabine and Carcinoma

5--oleoyl-cytarabine has been researched along with Carcinoma* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for 5--oleoyl-cytarabine and Carcinoma

ArticleYear
Antitumor activity of P-4055 (elaidic acid-cytarabine) compared to cytarabine in metastatic and s.c. human tumor xenograft models.
    Cancer research, 1999, Jun-15, Volume: 59, Issue:12

    The antineoplastic efficacy of P-4055, a 5'-elaidic acid (C18:1, unsaturated fatty acid) ester of cytarabine, a nucleoside antimetabolite frequently used in the treatment of hematological malignancies, was examined in several in vivo models for human cancer. In initial dose-finding studies in nude mice, the efficacy of P-4055 was highest when using schedules with repeated daily doses. In a Raji Burkitt's lymphoma leptomeningeal carcinomatosis model in nude rats, the control cytarabine- and saline-treated animals (five in each group) had a mean survival time of 13.2 days, whereas treatment with P-4055 resulted in three of five long-time survivors (>70 days). In a systemic Raji leukemia model in nude mice, 8 of 10 of the P-4055-treated animals survived (>80 days), compared with none of the cytarabine-treated animals (mean survival time, 34.2 days). In s.c. xenograft models, the effects of maximum tolerated doses of P-4055 and cytarabine, given in four weekly cycles of daily bolus i.v. injections for 5 subsequent days, against seven tumors (three melanomas, one lung adenocarcinoma, one breast cancer, and two osteogenic sarcomas) were investigated. P-4055 induced partial or complete tumor regression of the lung carcinoma, as well as of all three malignant melanomas. In two of the melanomas the activity was highly superior to that of cytarabine, and both P-4055 and cytarabine were, in general, more effective than several clinically established drugs previously tested in the same tumor models. In in vitro studies, inhibitors of nucleoside carrier-dependent transport, nitrobenzylmercaptopurine riboside and dipyridamol, reduced strongly the cellular sensitivity to cytarabine, but not to P-4055, indicating that P-4055 uses an alternative/additional mechanism of internalization into the cell compared with cytarabine. The results explain, at least in part, the observed differences between the two compounds in in vivo efficacy, and together the data strongly support the evaluation of P-4055 in clinical studies.

    Topics: Animals; Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic; Biological Transport; Carcinoma; Carrier Proteins; Cytarabine; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Fatty Acids, Unsaturated; Female; Humans; Leukemia L1210; Leukemia, Experimental; Membrane Proteins; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mice, Nude; Neoplasm Transplantation; Nucleoside Transport Proteins; Rats; Rats, Nude; Transplantation, Heterologous; Tumor Cells, Cultured

1999