Abstract

The recombinant oncotoxin OLX-209 [e23(Fv)PE38KDEL] has been developed to target cancers with erbB-2 expression and is nearing a clinical trial. Important in clinical planning is the selection of patients on the basis of tumor expression of erbB-2. ErbB-2 gene amplification occurs in cancers of the breast, stomach, and ovary. Patients with these diseases and evident overexpression are candidates for OLX-209 therapy. In lung cancer, overexpression of erbB-2 is also frequent, but in most cases, it is not caused by gene amplification. This study demonstrates that OLX-209 has activity on lung cancer cells with varying levels of erbB-2 expression in the presence and absence of gene amplification. In vitro sensitivity of cell lines to OLX-209 is related to erbB-2 expression level. Normal bronchial epithelial cells were not sensitive. Effective treatment of lung cancer cell lines growing as xenografts in nude mice was shown with Calu-3 (a lung adenocarcinoma line with high levels of p185(erbB-2) caused by gene amplification) and three other lung adenocarcinomas (A549, NCI-H1466, and 201T) with lower levels of p185(erbB-2) and no gene amplification. The 201T cell line was isolated recently from a lung tumor with erbB-2 expression in the original tumor. The results of this study indicate that patients with erbB-2-positive, non-small cell lung cancer should be included in clinical trials of OLX-209.

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