Abstract

Medulloblastoma is the most common high-grade brain tumor in childhood. Medulloblastomas with c-myc amplification, classified as group 3, are the most aggressive among the four disease subtypes resulting in a 5-year overall survival of just above 50%. Despite current intensive therapy regimens, patients suffering from group 3 medulloblastoma urgently require new therapeutic options. Using a recently established c-myc amplified human medulloblastoma cell line, we performed an in-vitro-drug screen with single and combinatorial drugs that are either already clinically approved or agents in the advanced stage of clinical development. Candidate drugs were identified in vitro and then evaluated in vivo. Tumor growth was closely monitored by BLI. Vessel development was assessed by 3D light-sheet-fluorescence-microscopy. We identified the combination of gemcitabine and axitinib to be highly cytotoxic, requiring only low picomolar concentrations when used in combination. In the orthotopic model, gemcitabine and axitinib showed efficacy in terms of tumor control and survival. In both models, gemcitabine and axitinib were better tolerated than the standard regimen comprising of cisplatin and etoposide phosphate. 3D light-sheet-fluorescence-microscopy of intact tumors revealed thinning and rarefication of tumor vessels, providing one explanation for reduced tumor growth. Thus, the combination of the two drugs gemcitabine and axitinib has favorable effects on preventing tumor progression in an orthotopic group 3 medulloblastoma xenograft model while exhibiting a favorable toxicity profile. The combination merits further exploration as a new approach to treat high-risk group 3 medulloblastoma.

Highlights

  • Medulloblastoma is the most common high-grade brain tumor in childhood

  • Using DNA methylation-based classification, we confirmed that MB3W1 cells classified, with an optimal calibrated score as Group 3 medulloblastoma

  • MB3W1 cells strongly expressed VEGFR-1, VEGFR-2 and VEGFR-3 and produced VEGF-A, which may serve as an endogenous stimulus (Fig. 1b)

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Summary

Introduction

Medulloblastoma is the most common high-grade brain tumor in childhood. Medulloblastomas with c-myc amplification, classified as group 3, are the most aggressive among the four disease subtypes resulting in a 5-year overall survival of just above 50%. Despite current intensive therapy regimens, patients suffering from group 3 medulloblastoma urgently require new therapeutic options. Newly defined molecular subgroups are highly relevant, as revealed by subtypespecific, diverging 5-year-survival rates between 40 and 80%1,2 These subgroups, termed WNT-activated group, SHH-activated group, group 3 and group 4, have become part of the new WHO tumor c­ lassification[3,4]. With group 3 tumors have the worst prognosis even with the current intensive therapy regimens, consisting of surgery, craniospinal irradiation and, among others, dose-intense cisplatin-, etoposide- and methotrexate-based ­chemotherapy[5]. These patients urgently need additional therapeutic options. We recently established and characterized a patient-derived tumor cell line, MB3W1, derived from the pleural effusion of a medulloblastoma with group 3-properties, which had relapsed after chemotherapy and i­rradiation[17]

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