Abstract

Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is a deadly disease for which no effective targeted therapeutic agent has been approved. Both AXL and c-MET have been reported to be independent prognostic factors for ESCC. Thus, inhibitors of AXL/c-MET might have great potential as targeted therapy for ESCC. In the current study, we evaluated the therapeutic potential of the AXL/c-MET selective inhibitors, R428 and cabozantinib, in cell and mouse xenograft models. We demonstrated that both R428 and cabozantinib significantly inhibited the growth of CE81T and KYSE-70 ESCC cells and showed by wound-healing assay that they both inhibited ESCC cell migration. In the animal model, ESCC xenograft models were established by injecting KYSE-70 cells with Matrigel into the upper back region of NOD-SCID male mice followed by treatment with vehicle control, R428 (50 mg/kg/day), cisplatin (1.0 mg/kg), or cabozantinib (30 mg/kg/day) for the indicated number of days. R428 alone significantly inhibited ESCC tumor growth compared to the vehicle; however, no synergistic effect with cisplatin was observed. Notably, the dramatic efficacy of cabozantinib alone was observed in the mouse xenograft model. Collectively, our study demonstrated that both cabozantinib and R428 inhibit ESCC growth in cell and xenograft models. The results reveal the great potential of using cabozantinib for targeted therapy of ESCC.

Highlights

  • Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) accounts for over 90% of primary esophageal cancer, a deadly disease with poor prognosis

  • Gefitinib was used as a second-line treatment in unselected esophageal cancer patients in a phase III trial but did not improve overall survival [47]

  • AXL is not considered a major oncogenic driver, its overexpression has been found to be correlated with a wide array of cancer-related events, including resistance to certain targeted agents and chemotherapy, tumor angiogenesis and metastasis, suppression of anti-tumor immune response, and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) accounts for over 90% of primary esophageal cancer, a deadly disease with poor prognosis. Patients usually remain undiagnosed until reaching a locally advanced stage as no obvious symptoms present at early stages of the disease. The standard treatment of locally advanced ESCC is (pre-operative) concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) followed by surgery [2, 3]. Good response to CCRT has been found to correlate with better prognosis [4]; the pathologically complete remission rate is usually

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