Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether cisplatin would enhance the radioresponse of a human tumour xenograft when given in different schedules combined with accelerated fractionated radiation therapy. A human squamous carcinoma of the hypopharynx, FaDu, was grown in the thigh of athymic nude mice. Tumours were exposed to twice-daily 2-Gy fractions, applied 6 h apart over 2 weeks, 5 days a week, alone or combined with cisplatin given at maximally tolerated doses in three different schedules: (1) i.p. as a single bolus (SB) or (2) i.p. as a daily bolus at 30 min before the first daily radiation fraction or (3) s.c. as a continuous infusion through a mini-osmotic pump over 13 days, commencing 24 h prior to the first daily radiation fraction. The end point for the study was tumour growth delay (TGD), calculated as the difference between the delay in regrowth to 200% of the initial tumour size in treated versus control mice. SB cisplatin plus radiation showed only an additive effect on TGD, whereas daily-bolus and continuous-infusion cisplatin demonstrated a greater than additive effect when combined with accelerated fractionated radiation in this human tumour model. Cisplatin appears to be especially beneficial as a radiation enhancer when given throughout the course of radiation.
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Received: 15 December 1996 / Accepted: 25 March 1997
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Joschko, M., Webster, L., Bishop, J. et al. Radioenhancement by cisplatin with accelerated fractionated radiotherapy in a human tumour xenograft. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 40, 534–539 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002800050699
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002800050699