Abstract

Abstract Background: Poor prognosis and frequent relapses are major challenges for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma (NB), especially when tumors show MYCN amplification. High-dose chemotherapy triggers apoptosis, necrosis, and senescence, a cellular stress response leading to permanent proliferative arrest and a typical senescence-associated secretome (SASP). SASP components reinforce growth arrest and act in an immune-stimulatory fashion, while others are tumor promoting. Studies on low-dose long-term, i.e., metronomic, treatment schedules have demonstrated effects on the tumor microenvironment, but have not comprehensively analyzed cellular responses in tumor cells. Methods and Results: We evaluated efficacy and mode of action of low-dose metronomic treatment schedules in in vitro and in vivo NB models. Importantly, by using the secretome as a discriminator for beneficial versus adverse effects of senescence, drugs with a tumor-inhibiting SASP were identified. Our preclinical work has demonstrated that low-dose long-term topotecan (TPT) treatment (0.1 mg/kg/d, i.p., daily over 15 weeks) improves survival in mouse NB xenografts and leads to long-term cure in 40% of mice. TPT induces a tumor-inhibiting type of senescence, accompanied by changes in the tumor transcriptome and secretome, specifically in MYCN-amplified NB cells. As senescent NB cells showed a reduced MYCN copy number and strongly downregulated MYCN expression, we investigated the mechanism of MYCN inactivation. This showed that upon senescence MYCN is epigenetically silenced and gene copies are recruited to the nuclear periphery where changes in the nuclear lamina composition take place. Conclusion: This new mode of action of metronomic TPT treatment, i.e., promoting a tumor-inhibiting type of senescence selectively in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma, is clinically relevant as metronomic regimens are increasingly implemented in therapy protocols of various cancer entities and are considered as a feasible maintenance treatment option with moderate adverse event profiles. Citation Format: Sabine Taschner-Mandl, Teresa Gerber, Magdalena Schwarz, Johanna Blaha, Maximilian Kauer, Florian Kromp, Nelli Frank, Fikret Rifatbegovic, Tamara Weiss, Ruth Ladenstein, Martin Hohenegger, Inge M. Ambros, Peter F. Ambros. Metronomic topotecan causes MYCN inactivation and impedes tumor growth selectively in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cells in vitro and in vivo by therapy-induced senescence [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference: Pediatric Cancer Research: From Basic Science to the Clinic; 2017 Dec 3-6; Atlanta, Georgia. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2018;78(19 Suppl):Abstract nr A17.

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