J

J. V. Bready

Amgen (United States)

Publishes on Head and Neck Cancer Studies, Effects of Radiation Exposure, Oral health in cancer treatment. 3 papers and 471 citations.

3Publications
471Total Citations

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Keratinocyte growth factor protects mice from chemotherapy and radiation-induced gastrointestinal injury and mortality.
Cited by 362

Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) stimulates the proliferation and differentiation of epithelial cells including those of the gastrointestinal tract. Although chemotherapeutics and radiation exposure kill rapidly proliferating tumor cells, rapidly dividing normal cells of the host's gastrointestinal tract are also frequently damaged, leading to the clinical condition broadly termed "mucositis." In this report, recombinant human KGF used as a pretreatment in several mouse models of chemotherapy and/or radiation-induced gastrointestinal injury significantly improved mouse survival. Using multiple-dose 5-fluorouracil, methotrexate, and radiation in combination and total body radiation alone models, KGF increased survival by 55% or greater. In the models that used chemotherapy with or without radiation, KGF significantly ameliorated weight loss after injury and accelerated weight gain during recovery. The basis of these systemic benefits appears to be due in part to the trophic effects of the growth factor on the intestinal epithelium because KGF pretreatment caused an increase in measures of mucosal thickness (villus height and crypt depth) that persisted during the course of 5-fluorouracil chemotherapy. Treatment with KGF also afforded a 3.5-fold improvement in crypt survival in the small intestine, suggesting that KGF also has a direct effect on the crypt stem cells. These data indicate that KGF may be therapeutically useful to lessen the intestinal side effects of current cancer therapy regimens.

The effects of keratinocyte growth factor in preclinical models of mucositis
Catherine L. Farrell, Karen Rex, J. N. Chen et al.|Cell Proliferation|2002
Cited by 109Open Access

The epithelium of the oral cavity and small intestine of the gastrointestinal tract have a high rate of cell renewal and as such, are sensitive to cytotoxic therapies that kill rapidly dividing cells. Mucositis is a complication of cancer therapy where impairment of the regenerative capacity of the epithelium leads to atrophy, ulceration and a loss of barrier function. Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) is an epithelial cell-specific growth and differentiation factor that is trophic for the mucosal epithelium of the gastrointestinal tract. In this study, KGF in normal animals caused epithelial thickening in the squamous epithelium of the oral cavity and increased crypt depth and villus height of the small intestine. It also appeared to regulate gene expression in these tissues including that of some antioxidant enzymes and intestinal trefoil protein. KGF has been shown to be efficacious in several preclinical models of mucositis where KGF pretreatment reduced weight loss typically seen during and after the course of therapy and significantly improved survival. At a tissue level KGF reduced atrophy, accelerated regrowth, and decreased ulcer formation of the oral epithelium after irradiation, and improved crypt survival and prevented villus atrophy in the small intestine of irradiated or chemotherapy-treated mice. Preliminary studies suggest that its efficacy may be partly a consequence of the growth and differentiation effect, and also partly due to regulation of the expression of genes that play a role in mucosal protection. These data suggest that KGF may be useful for the prevention or treatment of mucositis in patients treated with regimens of cancer therapy that have gastrointestinal toxicity.

Discovery of a potent, highly selective Tie-2 kinase inhibitor demonstrating in vivo efficacy, based on a novel pyridyl triazine scaffold.
Cited by 0

Proc Amer Assoc Cancer Res, Volume 47, 2006 5549 Inhibition of angiogenesis is a promising and clinically validated approach for limiting tumor cell growth and survival. The receptor tyrosine kinase Tie-2 is expressed almost exclusively in the vascular endothelium and is required for developmental angiogenesis and vessel maturation. However, the significance of Tie-2 signaling in tumor angiogenesis is not fully understood. In order to explore the therapeutic utility of Tie-2 inhibition we developed a series of potent and orally bioavailable small molecule Tie-2 kinase inhibitors with selectivity over other kinases critical for tumor angiogenesis. A pyridyl triazine-based inhibitor exhibited >30-fold selectivity, good oral exposure, and in vivo inhibition of Tie-2 autophosphorylation. With the aid of X-ray co-crystal structures, hypotheses about the origin of selectivity over VEGFR-2 and other kinases can begin to be formulated. Classical heterocyclic chemistry and palladium-catalyzed reactions were utilized to rapidly modify this modular scaffold. The identification of potent and highly selective Tie-2 inhibitors with activity in vivo has provided a unique tool to assess the role of Tie-2 signaling in tumor angiogenesis.