EC140 is a water soluble folate conjugate of desacetylvinblastine monohydrazide (DAVLBH), which is constructed with an endosome-cleavable acyl hydrazone bond. This agent has proven to be active and specific against well established, subcutaneous folate receptor (FR)-positive tumors in multiple animal models. Recent structure-activity and optimization studies have yielded a disulfide bond-containing counterpart to EC140, herein referred to as EC145. This new conjugate was found to retain high affinity for FR-positive cells, and it produced specific, dose-responsive activity in vitro. Comparative in vivo efficacy tests confirmed that, like EC140, EC145 displays activity against both syngeneic and xenograft tumor models. However, EC145 was found to be more active and better tolerated than EC140; hence, more durable complete responses were consistently observed in EC145-treated tumorbearing animals. Furthermore, EC145 was not found to be active against a FR-negative tumor model. Additional preclinical studies are therefore warranted to better understand EC145's breadth of activity against FR-positive tumors. ' 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
The membrane-bound high-affinity folate receptor (FR) is highly expressed on a wide range of primary and metastatic human cancers, such as those originating in ovary, lung, breast, endometrium, kidney, and brain. Because folatelinked conjugates bind to and become internalized within FR-expressing cells (similar to that of free folic acid), we explored the possibility of using the folate ligand to target a potent, semisynthetic analogue of the microtubule inhibitor tubulysin B to FR-enriched tumors. When tested in vitro, a novel folate conjugate, herein referred to as EC0305, was found to specifically inhibit the growth of a panel of FR-positive cell lines (IC 50 range, 1-10 nmol/L) in a dosedependent manner, whereas cells lacking FR expression were unaffected. The potency of EC0305 was also confirmed against a human KB xenograft-nu/nu mouse cancer model. Here, a brief three times per week, 2-week regimen yielded remarkable antitumor activity (100% tumor-free animals) without causing significant weight loss or major organ tissue degeneration. In contrast, antitumor activity was completely abolished in EC0305-treated animals that were co-dosed with an excess of a nontoxic folate-containing analogue, thereby confirming that the antitumor effect of this agent was mediated by FRs. The advantage provided by folate conjugation was further proved by the untargeted free drug, which was found to be completely inactive at both tolerable and highly toxic dose levels. Collectively, these results show that this potent antiproliferative tubulysin compound can be specifically delivered to FR-positive tumors to provide substantial therapeutic benefit using well-tolerable dosing regimens. [Cancer Res 2008;68(23):9839-44]
A novel folate conjugate of mitomycin C, herein referred to as EC72, was designed and evaluated for biological activity against FR-positive cells and tumors. EC72 was produced by coupling folic acid-gamma-cysteine to 7-N-modified MMC via a disulfide bond. This water soluble conjugate was found to retain high affinity for FR-positive cells, and it produced dose responsive activity in vitro against a panel of folate receptor (FR)-positive cell lines. EC72's activity was considered to be targeted and specific for the FR since (i) excess folic acid blocked biological activity, and (ii) FR-negative cell lines were unresponsive to this drug. Initial in vivo tests confirmed EC72's activity in both syngeneic and xenograft models, and this activity occurred in the apparent absence of gross or pathological toxicity. These results are significant, since daily dosing of EC72 for more than 30 consecutive days yielded no evidence of myelosuppression or toxicity to major organs, including the FR-positive kidneys. The latter observation supports published data, indicating that the apically oriented kidney proximal tubule FRs function to salvage folates prior to their excretion and to return these molecules back into systemic circulation. Overall, EC72's performance in vitro and in vivo warrants further preclinical study before this novel targeted chemotherapeutic is considered for clinical investigation.
Folate receptors (FR) may be of use for targeted delivery of cytotoxic drugs in invasive urothelial carcinoma (iUC), for which improved therapy is needed. FR expression and function in iUC were explored and the antitumor activity and toxicity of a folate-targeted vinblastine conjugate were evaluated in dogs with naturally occurring iUC, an excellent model for human iUC. FR immunohistochemistry was carried out on iUC and normal human and dog bladder tissues together with nuclear scintigraphy in dogs to monitor iUC folate uptake. Dose escalation of a folate-targeted vinblastine compound, EC0905, was conducted in dogs with biopsy-confirmed, FR-positive iUC. FRs were detected by immunohistochemistry (PU17) in most primary iUC and many nodal and lung metastases from dogs, and scintigraphy confirmed folate uptake in both primary and metastatic lesions. The maximum tolerated dose of EC0905 in dogs was 0.25 mg/kg IV weekly, with neutropenia at higher doses. Tumor responses included partial remission (!50% reduction in tumor volume) in five dogs and stable disease (<50% change in tumor volume) in four dogs. Immunoreactivity to PU17 was similar in humans (78% of primary iUC, 80% of nodal metastases). Less immunoreactivity to mab343 (22% of cases) occurred. FR-b was noted in 21% of human iUC cases. Our findings suggest folate-targeted therapy holds considerable promise for treating iUC, where FR-b may be important in addition to FR-a. Cancer Res; 73(2); 875-84. Ó2012 AACR.
Herein we report on the potencies of 4 related folate-conjugated tubulysins constructed with either tubulysin B hydrazide (EC0305), tubulysin A hydrazide (EC0510), the N,O-acetal derivative of natural tubulysins (EC0317) or a tubulysin B ester (EC0302). Our results confirmed that EC0305 is the most favorable conjugate of the group due to its potent antitumor activity [100% cures at 1 micromol/kg, three times a week (TIW) for 2 weeks] and its favorably low toxicity profile. In contrast, the natural tubulysin B drug proved to be inactive against a human nasopharyngeal tumor model when administered at doses near to or greater than the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). When tested against more chemoresistant folate receptor expressing M109 and 4T1-cl2 tumors, EC0305 displayed superior antitumor activity over a previously disclosed folate conjugate of desacetylvinblastine monohydrazide (EC145). These studies demonstrate that EC0305 has significant antiproliferative activity against FR expressing tumors, including those which are generally more chemoresistant, and that EC0305 should be considered for development as a candidate for the treatment of advanced FR-expressing human cancers.
Herein, we present a detailed analysis on the effects of feeding laboratory mice both high and low folic acid (folate)-containing diets as related to associated changes in serum and red blood cell (RBC) folate levels, tissue-derived folate receptor levels, and the ability of folate-drug conjugates to bind and effectuate activity against folate receptor (FR)-positive tumor xenografts. Our data show that serum and RBC folate concentrations sharply drop immediately after mice are switched to low folate diets; however, both parameters reach steady-state, "humanlike" levels after 6 weeks. Interestingly, tissue-related folate binding capacities were also lowered during the dietary modulation period, whereas the net uptake of a radiolabeled folate conjugate was simultaneously increased 2.6-and 5-fold in FR-positive kidney and tumor tissue, respectively. Finally, the performances of several clinically and preclinically relevant folate-drug conjugates were evaluated against tumors in mice that were fed high or low folate diets. Except when administered at a dose level 6-fold less than that required to saturate endogenous FRs, no significant loss of antitumor activity was observed. From these findings, we conclude that lowering the dietary intake of folates in mice has little impact on the biological activity of repetitively dosed folate-targeted agents but that low folate diet regimens will reduce serum and RBC folate levels down to levels that more closely approximate the normal human ranges.
During a phase I trial of EC145 (a folate-targeted vinca alkaloid conjugate), constipation was identified as the dose-limiting toxicity, probably from a nonfolate receptor-related liver clearance process capable of releasing unconjugated vinca alkaloid from EC145 and shuttling it to the bile. Here, we report on the selective placement of novel carbohydrate segments (1-amino-1-deoxy-glucitolyl-␥-glutamate) spaced in-between the folate and vinca alkaloid moieties of EC145, which yielded a new agent (EC0489) that is equipotent but less toxic than EC145.Whereas both compounds could cure tumor-bearing mice reproducibly, EC0489 differed from EC145 with i) a shorter elimination half-life, ii) approximately 70% decrease in bile clearance, iii) a 4-fold increase in urinary excretion, and iv) improved tolerability in rodents. This combination of improvements justified the clinical evaluation of EC0489 where currently administered dose levels have exceeded the maximal tolerated dose of EC145 by approximately 70%, thereby reflecting the translational benefits to this new approach.
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