Abstract

It has been reported that the combination therapy of imatinib mesylate, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, plus hydroxyurea, a ribonucleotide reductase inhibitor, is associated with remarkable antitumor activity in patients with recurrent glioblastoma multiforme. However, the mechanism of the added activity of hydroxyurea to imatinib is not known. The purpose of this study was to investigate in vitro, whether hydroxyurea could enhance the central nervous system penetration of imatinib, by inhibition of the ATP-dependent transporter proteins P-glycoprotein (ABCB1; MDR1; Pgp) and Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (ABCG2; BCRP), or by inhibition of cytochrome P450 3A (CYP3A) metabolism of imatinib. The effect of hydroxyurea on the Pgp and BCRP mediated transport of imatinib was investigated by the sulforhodamine-B (SRB) drug cytotoxicity assay and transepithelial transport assay. In vitro biotransformation studies with supersomes expressing human CYP3A4 were performed to investigate whether hydroxyurea inhibited CYP3A4. In both in vitro cytotoxicity and transport assays, hydroxyurea did not affect Pgp and BCRP mediated transport of imatinib. In a biotransformation assay, hydroxyurea had no influence on the metabolic degradation of imatinib either. The results indicate that hydroxyurea does not interact with imatinib by inhibition of Pgp and BCRP mediated transport or by CYP3A4 mediated metabolism of imatinib.

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