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  • Radium-223 Inhibits Osseous...
    Suominen, Mari I; Fagerlund, Katja M; Rissanen, Jukka P; Konkol, Yvonne M; Morko, Jukka P; Peng, ZhiQi; Alhoniemi, Esa J; Laine, Salla K; Corey, Eva; Mumberg, Dominik; Ziegelbauer, Karl; Käkönen, Sanna-Maria; Halleen, Jussi M; Vessella, Robert L; Scholz, Arne

    Clinical cancer research, 08/2017, Letnik: 23, Številka: 15
    Journal Article

    Radium-223 dichloride (radium-223, Xofigo), a targeted alpha therapy, is currently used for the treatment of patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) with bone metastases. This study examines the mode-of-action and antitumor efficacy of radium-223 in two prostate cancer xenograft models. Mice bearing intratibial LNCaP or LuCaP 58 tumors were randomized into groups ( = 12-17) based on lesion grade and/or serum PSA level and administered radium-223 (300 kBq/kg) or vehicle, twice at 4-week intervals. X-rays and serum samples were obtained biweekly. Soft tissue tumors were observed macroscopically at sacrifice. Tibiae were analyzed by gamma counter, micro-CT, autoradiography and histology. Radium-223 inhibited tumor-induced osteoblastic bone growth and protected normal bone architecture, leading to reduced bone volume in LNCaP and abiraterone-resistant LuCaP 58 models. Furthermore, radium-223 resulted in lower PSA values and reduced total tissue and tumor areas, indicating that treatment constrains prostate cancer growth in bone. In addition, radium-223 suppressed abnormal bone metabolic activity as evidenced by decreased number of osteoblasts and osteoclasts and reduced level of the bone formation marker PINP. Mode-of-action studies revealed that radium-223 was deposited in the intratumoral bone matrix. DNA double-strand breaks were induced in cancer cells within 24 hours after radium-223 treatment, and PSA levels were significantly lower 72 hours after treatment, providing further evidence of the antitumor effects. Taken together, radium-223 therapy exhibits a dual targeting mode-of-action that induces tumor cell death and suppresses tumor-induced pathologic bone formation in tumor microenvironment of osseous CRPC growth in mice. .