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Review
. 1985;3(1):3-21.
doi: 10.1007/BF00176819.

The effectiveness of the anthracycline analog 4'-epidoxorubicin in the treatment of experimental tumors: a review

Review

The effectiveness of the anthracycline analog 4'-epidoxorubicin in the treatment of experimental tumors: a review

A Goldin et al. Invest New Drugs. 1985.

Abstract

The current report presents the data of the Division of Cancer Treatment of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) on the antitumor activity of the anthracycline antibiotic 4'-epidoxorubicin in experimental tumor systems. Direct comparisons are made with doxorubicin in individual experiments, and the data are related to those of earlier studies in the form of a review of experimental activity, in order to assess the relative activity of 4'-epidoxorubicin and doxorubicin. The experimental test models utilized by the NCI for these studies included the leukemias P388 and L1210, B-16 melanoma, Lewis lung carcinoma, the colon tumors 26 and 38, and the mammary tumors CD8F1 and C3H16/C. The human tumors growing in xenograft in athymic mice included the models LX-1 lung tumor, CX-1 colon tumor, and MX-1 mammary tumor. Additional comparisons were made with the tumor models Gross leukemia, sarcoma 180, MSV-induced sarcoma, MS-2 tumor, and a variety of human tumors growing in athymic mice, as well as with in vivo toxicologic and in vitro cytotoxicity models. Although for 4'-epidoxorubicin there is only a minimal alteration of the configuration of the doxorubicin molecule, quantitative comparison of 4'-epidoxorubicin and doxorubicin revealed not only similarities but also differences in biological activity. Both drugs showed activity against a broad spectrum of experimental tumors, with 4'-epidoxorubicin more effective against some tumors and equally effective against others. 4'-Epidoxorubicin evidenced less toxicity than doxorubicin in both acute and chronic toxicity studies with retention of therapeutic effectiveness and showed reduced cardiotoxicity. With 4'-epidoxorubicin there resulted a higher therapeutic index and therapeutic ratio, permitting the use of higher dosage and a greater margin of safety. The preclinical differences in therapeutic and toxicologic manifestations of 4'-epidoxorubicin, reflecting apparent alterations in pharmacologic properties and mode of action in comparison with doxorubicin, support the broad spectrum clinical trials of this already-demonstrated clinically active drug.

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