Cancer chemotherapy and pharmacology
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Cancer Chemother. Pharmacol. · Mar 2004
Thrombospondin-1 plus irinotecan: a novel antiangiogenic-chemotherapeutic combination that inhibits the growth of advanced human colon tumor xenografts in mice.
Chemotherapy for the treatment of advanced or metastatic colon cancer, utilizing agents such as 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and irinotecan (CPT-11), produce a 5-year survival of about 10%. Thus, the identification of new, effective, therapeutic regimens to treat this disease remains critically important. To this end, selected antiangiogenic agents, compounds that inhibit neovascularization, have been shown to produce a modest tumor growth-inhibitory effect with little systemic toxicity. ⋯ When TSP-1 was combined with CPT-11, a significant ( P< or = 0.05) inhibition of tumor growth also was observed (T/C < or = 0.17, range 0.11-0.20). Importantly, this enhanced tumor growth inhibition was obtained without significant toxicity. The therapeutic implications of these findings are discussed.