V

V.A. Miller

Boston Foundation

Publishes on Lung Cancer Treatments and Mutations, Cancer Genomics and Diagnostics, Lung Cancer Research Studies. 132 papers and 4.2k citations.

132Publications
4.2kTotal Citations

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Efficacy of cytotoxic agents against human tumor xenografts is markedly enhanced by coadministration of ZD1839 (Iressa), an inhibitor of EGFR tyrosine kinase.
Cited by 762

The blockade of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) function with monoclonal antibodies has major antiproliferative effects against human tumors in vivo. Similar antiproliferative effects against some of these same tumors have also been observed with specific inhibitors of the EGFR-associated tyrosine kinase. One such inhibitor, the p.o. active ZD1839 (Iressa), has pronounced antiproliferative activity against human tumor xenografts. We now show that coadministration of ZD1839, as with anti-EGFR, will enhance the efficacy of cytotoxic agents against human vulvar (A431), lung (A549 and SK-LC-16 NSCL and LX-1), and prostate (PC-3 and TSU-PR1) tumors. Oral ZD1839 (five times daily x 2) and cytotoxic agents (i.p. every 3-4 days x 4) were given for a period of 2 weeks to mice with well-established tumors. On this schedule, the maximum tolerated dose (150 mg/kg) of ZD1839 induced partial regression of A431, a tumor that expresses high levels of EGFR, 70-80% inhibition among tumors with low but highly variable levels of EGFR expression (A549, SKLC-16, TSU-PR1, and PC-3), and 50-55% inhibition against the LX-1 tumor, which expresses very low levels of EGFR. ZD1839 was very effective in potentiating most cytotoxic agents in combination treatment against all of these tumors, irrespective of EGFR status, but dose reduction of ZD1839 below its single-agent maximum tolerated dose was required for optimum tolerance. The pronounced growth inhibitory action of the platinums, cisplatin and carboplatinum, as single agents against A431 vulvar, A549 and LX-1 lung, and TSU-PR1 and PC-3 prostate tumors was increased several-fold when ZD1839 was added, with some regression of A431 and PC-3 tumors. Although the taxanes, paclitaxel or docetaxel, as single agents markedly inhibited the growth of A431, LX-1, SK-LC-16, TSU-PR1, and PC-3, when combined with ZD1839, partial or complete regression was usually seen. Against A549, the growth inhibition of doxorubicin was increased 10-fold (>99%) with ZD1839. The folate analogue, edatrexate, was highly growth inhibitory against A549, LX-1, and TSU-PR1, whereas edatrexate combined with ZD1839 resulted in partial or complete regression in these tumors. Against the A431 tumor, paclitaxel alone either was highly growth inhibitory or induced some regression, but when combined with ZD1839, pronounced regression was obtained. Combination with gemcitabine neither added nor detracted from baseline cytotoxic efficacy, whereas ZD1839 combined with vinorelbine was poorly tolerated. Overall, these results suggest that potentiation of cytotoxic treatment with ZD1839 does not require high levels of EGFR expression in the target tumors. They also suggest significant clinical benefit from ZD1839 in combination with a variety of widely used cytotoxic agents.

"Pulsatile" high-dose weekly erlotinib for CNS metastases from EGFR mutant non-small cell lung cancer
Cited by 343Open Access

Erlotinib is effective for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutant lung cancer, but CNS penetration at standard daily dosing is limited. We previously reported that intermittent "pulsatile" administration of high-dose (1500 mg) erlotinib once weekly was tolerable and achieved concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid exceeding the half maximal inhibitory concentration for EGFR mutant lung cancer cells in a patient with leptomeningeal metastases; we now expand this paradigm to a series of 9 patients. We retrospectively identified patients with EGFR mutant lung cancer treated with pulsatile erlotinib for CNS metastases (brain and/or leptomeningeal) that occurred despite conventional daily erlotinib or other EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Mutations in available lung and CNS tissue were correlated with efficacy. Erlotinib was administered as monotherapy at a median dose of 1500 mg weekly. Best CNS radiographic response was partial in 67% (6/9, including 2 with isolated leptomeningeal metastases), stable disease in 11% (1/9), and progressive disease in 22% (2/9). Median time to CNS progression was 2.7 months (range, 0.8-14.5 months) and median overall survival was 12 months (range, 2.5 months-not reached). Treatment was well tolerated. No acquired resistance mutations in EGFR were identified in the CNS metastases of 4 patients, including 1 harboring T790M outside the CNS. Pulsatile erlotinib can control CNS metastases from EGFR mutant lung cancer after failure of standard daily dosing. CNS disease may not harbor acquired resistance mutations that develop systemically. A prospective trial is planned.

A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase IIIb trial (ATLAS) comparing bevacizumab (B) therapy with or without erlotinib (E) after completion of chemotherapy with B for first-line treatment of locally advanced, recurrent, or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
V.A. Miller, Arabinda K. Das, M. Rossi|Journal of Clinical Oncology|2009
Cited by 193

LBA8002 The full, final text of this abstract will be available in Part II of the 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting Proceedings, distributed onsite at the Meeting on May 30, 2009, and as a supplement to the June 20, 2009, issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. [Table: see text]