Local injection of submicron particle docetaxel is associated with tumor eradication, reduced systemic toxicity and an immunologic response in uro-oncologic xenografts

Holly A. Maulhardt, Lauren Hylle, Michael V. Frost, Ashley Tornio, Sara Dafoe, Leanne Drummond, David I. Quinn, Ashish M. Kamat, Gere S. Dizerega

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Intratumoral (IT) administration of submicron particle docetaxel (NanoDoce®, NanOlogy LLC, FortWorth, TX, USA) and its efficacy against genitourinary-oncologic xenografts in rats and mice, xenograft-site docetaxel concentrations and immune-cell infiltration were studied. IT-NanoDoce®, IV-docetaxel and IT-vehicle were administered to clear cell renal carcinoma (786-O: rats), transitional cell bladder carcinoma (UM-UC-3: mice) and prostate carcinoma (PC-3: mice). Treatments were given every 7 days with 1, 2, or 3 doses administered. Animals were followed for tumor growth and clinical signs. At necropsy, 786-O and UM-UC-3 tumor-site tissues were evaluated by H&E and IHC and analyzed by LC-MS/MS for docetaxel concentration. Two and 3 cycles of IT-NanoDoce® significantly reduced UM-UC-3 tumor volume (p < 0.01) and eliminated most UM-UC-3 and 786-O tumors. In both models, NanoDoce® treatment was associated with (peri)tumor-infiltrating immune cells. Lymphoid structures were observed in IT-NanoDoce®-treated UM-UC-3 animals adjacent to tumor sites. IT-vehicle and IV-docetaxel exhibited limited immune-cell infiltration. In both studies, high levels of docetaxel were detected in NanoDoce®-treated animals up to 50 days post-treatment. In the PC-3 study, IT-NanoDoce® and IV-docetaxel resulted in similar tumor reduction. NanoDoce® significantly reduced tumor volume compared to IT-vehicle in all xenografts (p < 0.0001). We hypothesize that local, persistent, therapeutic levels of docetaxel from IT-NanoDoce® reduces tumor burden while increasing immune-cell infiltration. IT NanoDoce® treatment of prostate, renal and bladder cancer may result in enhanced tumoricidal effects.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number577
JournalCancers
Volume11
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2019

Keywords

  • Bladder
  • Cancer
  • Docetaxel
  • Genitourinary oncology
  • Intratumoral
  • NanoDoce®
  • Nanoparticle
  • Prostate
  • Renal

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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