Abstract

The recurrence of pulmonary metastases resistant to salvage chemotherapy continues to be a major problem in osteosarcoma patients. Our goal is to identify novel combinations of biologic response modifiers plus chemotherapeutic agents that can be translated into clinical trials. Response rates of relapsed osteosarcoma patients to etoposide have been extremely low. The present investigation demonstrated that IL-1 alpha dramatically increased the sensitivity of MG-63, SAOS-2, and TE-85 osteosarcoma cells to etoposide when the two agents were used simultaneously. The cytostatic activity of 1 microM etoposide was increased from 35 to 70%, 30 to 65%, and 4 to 90%, respectively, by 5.0 U/ml IL-1 alpha. Analysis using the colony-forming assay to quantify cytotoxicity showed that the percentage of cell survival following exposure to etoposide decreased from 0.81 to 0.56, 0.55 to 0.2, and 0.4 to 0.05 when the combination treatment was used. Increased sensitivity was not seen when etoposide treatment preceded IL-1 alpha treatment. IL-1 alpha also increased the sensitivity of these cells to doxorubicin but not to cisplatin or topotecan. The mechanism of this enhanced activity is independent of p-glycoprotein, drug-uptake, or effects on topoisomerase II.

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