Abstract

Recent data have shown that the in vitro and in vivo cytotoxicity of bioreductive drugs could be significantly increased by combination with ionising radiation or chemotherapy. Various parameters such as oxygen tension and timing of administration of the drugs could play a crucial role in the efficacy of combined treatment modalities. The aim of this study was to define the oxygen dependency of cell survival after in vitro irradiation and incubation with tirapazamine, a bioreductive drug, and cisplatin given alone or simultaneously. Two human cell lines were studied: one cell line sensitive to tirapazamine, Na11+, a pigmented melanoma with a high percentage of hypoxic cells, and a less sensitive cell line to tirapazamine, HRT18, a rectal adenocarcinoma. Gas changes were made to study cell survival at four different oxygen concentrations (pO2): air (20.9% O2), 10.2 and 0.2% O2. Cells were incubated with tirapazamine and cisplatin alone or combined for one hour at 37 degrees C, then irradiated and cultured. For Na11+, cell survival after irradiation was comparable in air and at 10% oxygen with the two drugs given alone or combined. At 2 and 0.2% oxygen, cell killing was largely increased by tirapazamine and was not modified by the addition of cisplatin. For HRT18, cell survival was not modified when cisplatin was added to radiation, whatever the oxygen partial pressure. At low pO2 (2 and 0.2%) the cytotoxic effect of tirapazamine was not significantly decreased by the addition of cisplatin. When cytotoxic and bioreductive drugs are combined to radiation, the magnitude of the observed effect is highly dependent on the partial oxygen pressure and on the sensitivity of the cell line to the individual drugs. This has very important implications for clinical strategies based on combined chemo-radiotherapy.

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