Clinical Trial of Oral Nelfinavir before and during Radiation Therapy for Advanced Rectal Cancer

Authors: Hill, E.J., Roberts, C., Franklin, J., Enescu, M., West, N. and MacGregor, T.P.

Journal: Clinical cancer research

Volume: 22

Issue: 8

Pages: 1922-1931

Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research

ISSN: 1078-0432

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/34608/

Source: Manual

Clinical Trial of Oral Nelfinavir before and during Radiation Therapy for Advanced Rectal Cancer

Authors: Hill, E.J., Robertson, C., Franklin, J.M., Enescu, M., West, N. and MacGregor, T.P.

Journal: Clinical cancer research

Volume: 22

Issue: 8

Pages: 1922-1931

ISSN: 1078-0432

Abstract:

Purpose Nelfinavir, a PI3-kinase pathway inhibitor, is a radiosensitizer which increases tumor blood flow in preclinical models. We conducted an early-phase study to demonstrate the safety of nelfinavir combined with hypofractionated radiotherapy (RT) and to develop biomarkers of tumor perfusion and radiosensitization for this combinatorial approach.

Patients and Methods Ten patients with T3-4 N0-2 M1 rectal cancer received 7 days of oral nelfinavir (1250 mg bd) and a further 7 days of nelfinavir during pelvic RT (25 Gy/5 fractions/7 days).

Perfusion CT (p-CT) and DCE-MRI scans were performed pre-treatment, after 7 days of nelfinavir and prior to last fraction of RT. Biopsies taken pre-treatment and 7 days after the last fraction of RT were analysed for tumor cell density (TCD).

Results There were 3 drug-related grade 3 adverse events: diarrhea, rash, lymphopenia. On DCE-MRI, there was a mean 42% increase in median Ktrans, and a corresponding median 30% increase in mean blood flow on p-CT during RT in combination with nelfinavir. Median TCD decreased from 24.3% at baseline to 9.2% in biopsies taken 7 days after RT (P=0.01). Overall, 5/9 evaluable patients exhibited good tumor regression on MRI assessed by Tumor Regression Grade (mrTRG).

Conclusions This is the first study to evaluate nelfinavir in combination with RT without concurrent chemotherapy. It has shown that nelfinavir-RT is well tolerated and is associated with increased blood flow to rectal tumors. The efficacy of nelfinavir-RT versus RT alone merits clinical evaluation, including measurement of tumor blood flow.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/34608/

Source: BURO EPrints