Adenoviral-mediated p53 gene transfer to non-small cell lung cancer through endobronchial injection
- PMID: 11035664
- DOI: 10.1378/chest.118.4.966
Adenoviral-mediated p53 gene transfer to non-small cell lung cancer through endobronchial injection
Abstract
Objective: The objective was to determine the degree of toxicity and antitumor activity following bronchoscopic injection of an adenoviral-mediated p53 gene (Adp53) into tumors causing airway obstruction. DOSING: This was a subset analysis of a phase I dose escalation trial.
Setting: Patients were treated in the outpatient clinics at the University of Texas (MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX) and at Medical City Dallas Hospital (US Oncology, Dallas, TX).
Patients: Twelve patients (median age, 60 years) with advanced endobronchial non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) (squamous cell carcinoma, six patients; adenocarcinoma, six patients) were entered into trial. The median tumor area was 5 x 3.2 cm. All patient tumors contained a p53 gene mutation.
Interventions: Adp53 (dose range, 1 x 10(6) to 1 x 10(11) plaque-forming units) was administered by bronchoscopic intratumoral injection once every 28 days.
Measurements and results: Toxicity attributed to the Adp53 vector was minimal. Six of the 12 patients had significant improvement in airway obstruction, and 3 patients met the criteria for partial response.
Conclusions: Direct bronchoscopic injection of Adp53 into endobronchial NSCLC is safe, with acceptable levels of toxicity. The initial clinical results demonstrating relief of airway obstruction warrant further clinical investigation.
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