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Intravesical therapy is a treatment that is put directly into the bladder through a catheter and is then kept in the bladder for a small period of time. The medication is then drained from the bladder.

Intravesical chemotherapy of high-grade bladder cancer with HTI-286, a synthetic analogue of the marine sponge product hemiasterlin.

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Intravesical chemotherapy of high-grade bladder cancer with HTI-286, a synthetic analogue of the marine sponge product hemiasterlin.

Clin Cancer Res. 2008 Mar 1;14(5):1510-8

Authors: Hadaschik BA, Adomat H, Fazli L, Fradet Y, Andersen RJ, Gleave ME, So AI

PURPOSE: HTI-286 is a fully synthetic analogue of the natural tripeptide hemiasterlin that inhibits tubulin polymerization and has strong cytotoxic potential. In this study, we evaluate the inhibitory effects of HTI-286 on human bladder cancer growth, both in vitro and as an intravesical agent in an orthotopic murine model. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Various bladder cancer cell lines were treated with HTI-286 and mitomycin C (MMC) in vitro. Human KU-7 bladder tumor cells that stably express firefly luciferase were inoculated in female nude mice by intravesical instillation and quantified using bioluminescence imaging. Mice with established KU-7-luc tumors were given HTI-286 or MMC intravesically twice a week for 2 h. Pharmacokinetic data was obtained using high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses. RESULTS: In vitro, HTI-286 was a potent inhibitor of proliferation in all tested cell lines and induced marked increases in apoptosis of KU-7-luc cells even after brief exposure. In vivo, HTI-286 significantly delayed cancer growth of bladder tumors in a dose-dependent fashion. HTI-286, at a concentration of 0.2 mg/mL, had comparable strong cytotoxicity as 2.0 mg/mL of MMC. The estimated systemic bioavailability of intravesically given HTI-286 was 1.5% to 2.1% of the initial dose. CONCLUSIONS: Intravesical HTI-286 instillation therapy showed promising antitumor activity and minimal toxicity in an orthotopic mouse model of high-grade bladder cancer. These findings provide preclinical proof-of-principle for HTI-286 as an intravesical therapy for nonmuscle-invasive bladder cancer and warrant further evaluation of efficacy and safety in early-phase clinical trials.

PMID: 18316576 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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