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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0843
    Keywords: Key words Carboplatin ; Digitonin ; Liver tumour ; Tumour growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Platinum-containing drugs enter the cell slowly and have a poor tissue penetration. Increasing the permeability of the cell membrane might increase the intracellular drug concentration. Digitonin, a detergent that increases cell permeability by binding to cholesterol molecules in the cell membrane, can increase cisplatin accumulation and reduce tumour growth in vitro. The aim of this study was to determine whether digitonin could increase the efficacy of carboplatin (CBDCA) in vivo. In LH rats, a hepatoma was implanted in the liver. At 7 days after implantation, digitonin (or saline in the control group) was infused via the hepatic artery and, 10 min later, CBDCA was injected. Biopsies from the tumour and liver parenchyma were obtained after 1 h. The concentration of platinum measured in the liver tumours was higher in the digitonin group than in the control groups. In the liver parenchyma the concentrations were of the same magnitude. Measured with the 133Xe-clearance technique, digitonin did not alter the tumour blood flow. Digitonin enhanced the tumour-growth-retarding effect of CBDCA given intra-aterially at 5 mg/kg but not at 25 mg/kg. No increase in toxicity was observed for digitonin given together with CBDCA at 5 mg/kg. Systemic administration of CBDCA was not influenced by digitonin. These findings demonstrate that pretreatment with digitonin increases the tumour uptake of CBDCA and potentiates the cytotoxic effect of CBDCA.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1335
    Keywords: Indomethacin ; Tumour growth ; Zymosan ; RES ; Liver tumour ; Kupffer cells
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Zymosan—a non-specific macrophage-stimulating agent-reduces tumour take in the liver. The mechanism for this effect is not clear, but it may be mediated via the Kupffer cells and prostaglandins. On the other hand, the Prostaglandin-synthesis inhibitor, indomethacin, inhibits tumour growth. Pretreatment with zymosan (3 mg 100 g−1) for 3 days of two different strains of rats, inoculated in the liver with a hepatoma or an adenocarcinoma cell suspension respectively, reduced tumour take and also initial tumour growth. The effect on tumour take and initial growth was inhibited by concomitant administration of indomethacin (0.2 mg 100 g−1). When zymosan was administered after tumour cell inoculation the growth rate of the hepatoma was retarded, but this effect was not abrogated by indomethacin. Pretreatment with indomethacin had no significant effect on tumour take or initial growth. When given after the tumour was established in the liver, indomethacin reduced the growth rate of the hepatoma, but not of the adenocarcinoma. These results suggest that there are different mechanisms for the effects of zymosan on tumour take and on growth of an established tumour. In immunoincompetent nude mice the effect on the hepatoma was similar to the effect in the rat. In vitro both tumours were insensitive to zymosan and indomethacin. This study confirms that pretreatment with a non-specific macrophage stimulator (zymosan) diminishes tumour take and growth in the liver, that the effect of zymosan on tumour take in the liver is abrogated by indomethacin and that the zymosan effect on tumour take in the liver is at least partly mediated by the Kupffer cells and prostaglandins.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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