Drug treatment of tumors wherein hedgehog/smoothened signaling is utilized for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells
20170326118 · 2017-11-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61K47/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/4355
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K45/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K9/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K47/10
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/44
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01N2800/52
PHYSICS
A61K9/0019
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K2300/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K9/0014
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/58
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61K31/4355
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/44
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/58
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
This invention concerns use of cyclopamine or another selective inhibitor of hedgehog/smoothened signaling in vivo on basal cell carcinomas and other tumors wherein hedgehog/smoothened signalling is utilized for inhibition of differentiation and for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells to achieve differentiation and apoptotic death and removal of the tumor cells while preserving normal tissue cells and functions. Causation of apoptosis is by a non-genotoxic mechanism and thus unlike in the radiation therapy and most of the currently used cancer treatments which act by causing DNA-damage.
Claims
1. A method for treatment of a human subject having a tumor, comprising determining that the tumor in the subject is a tumor wherein Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling is utilized for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells, and administering to the subject a medicament comprised of a pharmaceutically acceptable molecule that selectively inhibits Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling, wherein said medicament is administered in a dosing that is sufficient to cause apoptosis of said tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor and the subject continues to have normal tissue cells showing labeling with the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein said molecule is cyclopamine or a functionally equivalent derivative of cyclopamine.
3. A method according to claim 1, wherein apoptosis of tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor in the subject are caused without genotoxicity.
4. A method according to claim 1, wherein said medicament is formulated for topical or systemic administration or for intratumoral injection or is adsorbed onto a dermal patch or is a controlled release or liposomal formulation or is in the form of a cream or ointment or gel or hydrogel.
5. A method for treatment of a human subject having a tumor, comprising determining that the tumor in the subject is a tumor wherein Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling is utilized for inhibition of differentiation and for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells, and administering to the subject a medicament comprised of a pharmaceutically acceptable molecule that selectively inhibits Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling, wherein said medicament is administered in a dosing that is sufficient to cause differentiation and apoptosis of said tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor and the subject continues to have normal tissue cells showing labeling with the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4.
6. A method according to claim 5, wherein said molecule is cyclopamine or a functionally equivalent derivative of cyclopamine.
7. A method according to claim 5, wherein apoptosis of tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor in the subject are caused without genotoxicity.
8. A method according to claim 5, wherein said medicament is formulated for topical or systemic administration or for intratumoral injection or is adsorbed onto a dermal patch or is a controlled release or liposomal formulation or is in the form of a cream or ointment or gel or hydrogel.
9. A method for treatment of a human subject having a tumor, comprising determining that the tumor in the subject is a tumor wherein Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling is utilized for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells, and administering to the subject a medicament comprised of cyclopamine or another pharmaceutically acceptable molecule that like cyclopamine selectively inhibits Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling, wherein said medicament is administered in a dosing that is sufficient to cause apoptosis of said tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor and the subject continues to have normal tissue cells showing labeling with the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4.
10. A method according to claim 9, wherein said another molecule is a functionally equivalent derivative of cyclopamine.
11. A method according to claim 9, wherein apoptosis of tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor in the subject are caused without genotoxicity.
12. A method according to claim 9, wherein said medicament is formulated for topical or systemic administration or for intratumoral injection or is adsorbed onto a dermal patch or is a controlled release or liposomal formulation or is in the form of a cream or ointment or gcl or hydrogel.
13. A medicament for treatment of a human subject having a tumor wherein Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling is utilized for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells, comprising a pharmaceutically acceptable molecule that selectively inhibits Hedgehog/Smoothened signaling, wherein said medicament is administered in a dosing that is sufficient to cause apoptosis of said tumor cells and decrease of size or disappearance of the tumor and the subject continues to have normal tissue cells showing labeling with the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4.
14. A medicament according to claim 13, wherein said molecule is cyclopamine or a functionally equivalent derivative of cyclopamine.
15. A medicament according to claim 13, wherein said medicament is formulated for topical or systemic administration or for intratumoral injection or is adsorbed onto a dermal patch or is a controlled release or liposomal formulation or is in the form of a cream or ointment or gel or hydrogel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0032] The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
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COLOR PRINTS
[0056] Color prints of the same figures as on pages 1/3 (
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0057] Cyclopamine was discovered as a teratogenic compound of Veratrum plants (Keeler R. F. (1969) Phytochemistry 8:223-225). It has been reported to inhibit differentiation of the precursors of the ventral cells in the developing brain (Incardona J. P. et al (1998) Development 125:3553-3562; Cooper M. K. et al. (1998) Science 280:1603-1607). Inhibition of cellular differentiation by cyclopamine has been reported in other systems as well, including the differentiation of bone marrow cells to erythroid cells (Detmer K. et al (2000) Dev. Biol. 222-242) and the differentiation of urogenital sinus to prostate (Berman D. M. et al (2000) J. Urol. 163-204). However, the opposite was found to be true in this invention with the tumor cells exposed to cyclopamine. Along with the cyclopamine-induced differentiation of tumor cells, apoptosis of tumor cells was also induced. Induction of tumor cell apoptosis by cyclopamine, again previously undescribed, is shown to be highly efficient. Furthermore, induction of apoptosis by cyclopamine was not secondary to a genotoxic effect and had extreme specificity; even the outer root sheath cells of hair follicles and normal epidermis basal cells that were adjacent to the tumor cells were well preserved while the tumor cells had differentiated and were undergoing apoptosis. Lack of adverse effects of the described treatment is confirmed also by the presence of clinically normal-looking healthy skin and hair at the sites of cyclopamine application in patients (longest duration of follow-up of a human subject is over 31 months at the time of writing and shows safety of the treatment also in the long term). Above summarised features of the treatment described in this invention make it highly desirable in cancer therapy and provide solutions to the long-standing problems of cancer therapy.
[0058] It is specifically contemplated that molecules can be derived from cyclopamine or synthesised in such a way that they possess structural features to exert similar receptor binding properties and biological/therapeutic effects as cyclopamine. Such a molecule is called here a “derivative of cyclopamine” and defined as follows: A molecule that contains the group of atoms of the cyclopamine molecule required for the binding of cyclopamine to its biological target but contains also modifications of the parent cyclopamine molecule in such ways that the newly derived molecule continues to be able to bind specifically to the same biological target to exert the biological effects of cyclopamine disclosed herein. Such modifications of cyclopamine may include one or more permissible replacement of or a deletion of a molecular group in the cyclopamine molecule or addition of a molecular group (particularly a small molecular group such as the methyl group) to the cyclopamine molecule, provided that the resultant molecule is stable and possesses the capability of specific binding to the same biological target as cyclopamine to exert the biological effects described herein. Derivation of such new molecules from cyclopamine can be readily achieved by those skilled in the art and the possession or lack of the biological effects of cyclopamine in the newly derived molecule can also be readily determined by those skilled in the art by testing for the biological effects disclosed herein.
[0059] For topical applications, cyclopamine can be dissolved in ethanol or another suitable solvent and mixed with a suitable base cream, ointment or gel. Cyclopamine may also be entrapped in hydrogels or in other pharmaceutical forms enabling controlled release and may be adsorbed onto dermal patches. In a pharmaceutical composition for topical administration, the cyclopamine or a salt or derivative thereof should be present in a concentration of 0.001 mM to 100 mM, preferably 12 to 24 mM. The effects shown in
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[0066] Cells undergoing apoptosis are known to be removed by macrophages and by nearby cells in normal tissues and the quantification of apoptotic activity by morphological criteria on hematoxylene-eosine stained sections is known to provide an underestimate. Despite these, the quantitative data shown in Table 1 show greatly increased apoptotic activity caused by cyclopamine among the residual BCC cells.
[0067] The loss of translucency in the cyclopamine-treated BCC's raises the intriguing possibility of differentiation of BCC's under the influence of cyclopamine. This possibility, which can be tested by immunohistochemical analyses of the BCC's, is found to be the case in this invention. In normal, epidermis, differentiation of basal layer cells to the upper layer cells is accompanied by a loss of labelling with the monoclonal antibody Ber-Ep4. Ber-Ep4 labels also the BCC cells and is a known marker for these neoplasms.
[0068] Another differentiation marker, Ulex Europeaus lectin type 1, normally does not label the BCC's or the basal layer cells of normal epidermis but labels the differentiated upper layer cells.
[0069] The p53 is a master regulator of the cellular response to DNA-damage. Amount of this protein is known to increase in the cell nucleus following exposure of cells to genotoxic agents. When the DNA-damage is increased beyond a threshold, p53 serves for the apoptotic death of cells. Radiation therapy of cancer and the genotoxic cancer chemotherapeutics that are currently common, act largely by this mechanism, i.e. by causation of apoptosis secondary to the damaging of DNA. The monoclonal antibody DO-7 can bind both normal and missense mutant (i.e. non-functional) forms of p53 and is known to be capable of detecting the increase of p53 in the cells following exposure to DNA-damaging agents.
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[0071] Arrest of the proliferation of BCC's is known to be associated with their retraction from stroma. Although retraction from stroma can also be caused artefactually by improper fixation and processing of the tissues, adherence to published technical details ensures avoidance of such artefacts. As shown in
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[0073] Causation of highly efficient differentiation and apoptosis of the tumor cells in vivo by cyclopamine at doses that preserve the undifferentiated tissue cells are hitherto unknown achievements that, together with the non-genotoxic mode of action of cyclopamine, support the use of cyclopamine not only on BCC's but also on those internal tumors that utilize the hedgehog/smoothened pathway for proliferation and for prevention of apoptosis and/or differentiation.
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[0075] Trichoepithelioma is another tumor associated with genetic changes that cause increased hedgehog-smoothened signalling (Vorechovsky L. et al. (1997) Cancer Res. 57:4677-4681; Nilsson M. et al. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97:3438-3443).
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[0077] The tumor nodule (marked by arrow in
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[0079] In view of the poor clinical status and weakness of patient and the severe dyspne associated with the obstruction and narrowing of the large airways, a two stage treatment strategy aiming to provide first adequate breathing and improvement of his general condition was decided. Under general anesthesia a medicament comprised of 18 mM cyclopamine in 98% ethanol, 2% phosphate buffered saline pH 7.4 was administered by direct injections into the tumoral growths into trachea and right lung's large airways with the aid of a bronchoscope. The medicament solution had been sterile filtered through a 0.2 μm pore size filter. A needle having 1.2 cm length was inserted to tumor to about 1 cm depth and about 2 ml of the medicament solution was administered during a period of about 5 minutes. The endoscopist was given latitude for injection around that rate of injection. Optimal number of the distances between each injection site varies depending on the configuration and size of a tumoral growth and optimal rate of injection can also vary depending on a particular tumor and interstitial fluid pressure in a tumor. Ideally an injection pump allowing accurate adjustment of rate of injection is preferred and an additional line joining the tubing near the needle and allowing co-administration of an appropriate diluent so that the concentration of ethanol exiting the needle can be reduced is preferred. Ethanol at high concentrations (e.g. absolute or 98%) is known to cause lysis of cell membranes to causes necrosis and to cause denaturation-precipitation of many proteins and direct injections of such concentrations of ethanol have long been used for causation of necrosis of small tumors by direct injection. Ethanol is readily miscible with aqueous media and can also help convection-enhanced delivery of drug molecules solubilized in it when intratumorally injected. A slow enough injection of a medicament solution having high concentrations of ethanol can also provide significant dilution of the small droplets of the ethanol carrier exiting the needle tip by the interstitial fluid in tumor. In the present example the tumoral growths into the airways were injected at positions about 2 to 3 cm apart under bronchoscopic visualization as above while slowly withdrawing the needle from the site of insertion and sterile saline administrations were used as needed, including for control of bleeding from a site of injection. In general the bleedings were minor and spontaneously ceased and instillation of cold saline was used for control of bleeding for a site showing continued bleeding.
[0080] Medicament administrations with the aid of a bronchoscope can be repeated in multiple sessions under anesthesia. In this case about 12 to 18 ml of 18 mM cyclopamine solution was injected directly into tumor in a session as above and was also instilled to small airways along with saline. Following the first session, already through the end of the first day, the patient expressed ease of breathing. His physical examination and tests also showed improved respiration and lack of an adverse effect of the treatment. About 48 hours after the first session, the medicament administrations were repeated in a second session as above. The tumor sites injected in the first session were seen to show significant decrease of size relative to the pre-treatment size when visualized during the second session. On the fourth day after the first session, a third session of bronchoscopic visualization and medicament administrations were repeated as above. On the fourth day the tumor had become markedly reduced in size and the formerly obliterated right bronchus had opened.
[0081] The patient showed continued improvement of respiration and clinical status following the third session of medicament administrations. He was no longer bed bound and could walk and climb without help. A magnetic resonance imaging on the eighth day of the start of medicament administrations showed that the lung tumor had decreased to about 45% of the pre-treatment size and there were no signs of an adverse effect of the medicament administrations in mediastinal structures. Tumor shrinkage at distances several centimeters away from the about 1 cm inserted needle tip, the distances at which ethanol concentration would be reduced to 5% and less even if it would not be diluted by means other than a simple diffusion through that distance, showed that the therapeutic effect was due to the dose of the selective inhibitor of Hh/Smo signalling reaching there. Cyclopamine can associate with albumin, lipoproteins and other tissue molecules for movements in tissues. With these results and continued improvement of the clinical status of patient, objective of the first stage of his treatment was considered achieved for proceeding to the next stage of causation of tumor disappearance.
[0082] The dosing of a tumor patient according to the instant tumor treatment aims at apoptotic removal of tumor cells from the patient as described in this invention. It can be achieved while preserving normal tissue cells and functions of patient as described and exemplified. The Ber-EP4 labeled normal tissue cells, e.g. those in hair follicles, that are determined to be preserved following exposure to a medicament dose sufficing to induce differentiation and apoptosis of the tumor cells in the patient, are known to be relatively undifferentiated cells. In normal tissues the monoclonal antibody Ber-EP4 recognizes a protein synthesized by normal stem cells and multipotent progenitors and differentiation of these cells is accompanied by loss of expression of the protein that can be detected also by a number of other monoclonal antibodies generated against it (e.g. De Boer C J et al, Journal of Pathology 1999; 188:201-206; Kubuschok B et al, Journal of Clinical Oncology 1999; 17:19-24). Induction of apoptosis of tumor cells in a given patient by a dosing can be determined by one of various known methods. Histopathological examination of tumor cells for morphological signs of apoptosis and immunohistochemical and other methods of determining the molecular markers of apoptosing cells are known and can be used to determine whether or not a dose administered to a patient is sufficient for apoptotic removal of the tumor cells from the patient. Tumor cells can be obtained from a patient by conventional biopsying, aspiration with ultrasonic guidance of a catheter or by other known means depending on its site. Blood sampling from a vein can also be used to determine suitable molecular markers released to the extracellular fluid and thereby to blood plasma. In vivo imaging methods to visualize apoptosing cells are known and have the advantage of simultaneous visualization and measurement of tumor size. For example, in vivo imaging results using radiolabelled annexin V have been described to show significant positive correlation with the results of histopathological determination of apoptosing cells and uses of other molecular markers and additional methods of in vivo imaging of apoptosing cells are also known (e.g. D'Arceuil H et al, Stroke 2000; 32:2692-2700; Blankenberg F et al, Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2001; 42:309-316).
[0083] Liver and renal functions are generally involved in metabolism and excretions of drug molecules and it is known that other functions of a patient may also be needed to take into account in optimization of a dose of a medicament aiming to cause in him or her a previously known particular therapeutic effect. In case of a terminally ill cancer patient like in the lung cancer patient in the above example, a staged approach to improve first the general clinical condition of the patient and then to cause tumor disappearance can be followed. In the example of aforementioned lung cancer patient, following the first stage of treatment that improved his clinical status, systemic dosing was initiated to remove the tumor cells from the metastatic foci and tumor regions that extended from lung to mediastinal sites not suited for direct intratumoral injection. Non-oral systemic dosing was performed as cyclopamine is known to be acid-labile and it was the selective inhibitor of Hh/Smo signalling available for treating this patient at a cost that his family could meet.
[0084] Cyclopamine is a small hydrophobic molecule with little solubility in ordinary aqueous media. It can be solubilized in ethanol for preparation of a medicament for use in the present drug treatment. It can also be complexed with human albumin (obtained by methods of cloning of encoding sequences or by conventional methods) for preparation of a medicament for use in the treatment. Cyclopamine-albumin complex can be stored lyophilized and reconstituted to an aqueous solution before infusion to patient. Complexing of cyclopamine with a physiological macromolecule has the advantage of decreasing losses of pharmaceutically active molecule through glomerular filtration before reaching to the environs of the target tumor cells via systemic circulation. In the case of a medicament comprised of cyclopamine solubilized in ethanol for systemic administration, the rate of infusion should be adjusted by taking into account the actions of the ethanol carrier in patient. Ethanol normally forms in small amounts in every person. Amounts of the ethanol solvent to be administered for treatment of a patient having a metastatic tumor can however be large and toxicity by it must be avoided as follows. Ethanol is frequently consumed by adults for its sedating and other effects and patients can show variation in their ethanol metabolism (same mg/kg/day amount of ethanol administered to different persons can cause varying effects depending on e.g. whether a person is chronic alcohol drinker or non-drinker). In general up to about 11 mM blood ethanol concentration can be sedative, 11-33 mM can cause decrease or lack of motor coordination, 33-43 mM can cause reversible ethanol intoxication and blood concentrations more than about 70-80 mM can cause unconsciousness and ethanol can be fatal at still higher concentrations. Ethanol is however metabolized rapidly so that by adjusting the rate of infusion one can achieve adequate systemic dosing of a patient with cyclopamine solubilized in ethanol without causation of intolerable effects of ethanol in the patient. Blood ethanol concentrations can be monitored by known methods (including indirectly through measurements in breath) and typically what mg/kg ethanol administrations produce what blood concentrations are also known. The above mentioned ethanol effects can be used as a guide for not exceeding an ethanol concentration in blood that would be intolerable.
[0085] Various means of non-oral systemic administration of medicaments have been known. Infusion into a vein is frequently practiced and other means of non-oral systemic administration are also known (e.g. administration to peritoneal cavity with aid of a catheter for passage from there to the systemic circulation). Since ethanol at high concentrations (e.g. 98% or absolute ethanol) can cause lysis of plasma membrane of cells and precipitation of proteins, its rate of entry into a vein or peritoneal cavity must be slow enough to provide dilution to avoid such unwanted effects. Administration by use of a Y shaped catheter arrangement where one line provides the cyclopamine-ethanol solution, the other provides an aqueous diluting solution (e.g. saline) and the two are mixed just before entry into vein or peritoneal cavity can be practiced to dilute the ethanol concentration to about 5-10% (or lower). Rate of infusion of a solution form medicament containing cyclopamine (e.g. 18 mM cyclopamine in 98% ethanol) can be adjusted by taking into account the effects of the carrier as mentioned above. The dosing of tumor patient in the present treatment aims to cause apoptosis of the tumor cells while sparing normal cells and normal organ functions of the patient. It can be achieved as it has been described above and exemplified with patients having a tumor wherein Hh/Smo signalling is utilized for inhibition of differentiation and for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells. In the example of aforementioned lung cancer patient systemic infusion of a medicament comprised of 18 mM cyclopamine in 98% ethanol, 2% phosphate buffered saline pH 7.4 was performed as above by infusion during a period of about 8-10 hours to cause apoptotic removal of the tumor cells and tumor disappearance while preserving the normal cells and functions of patient. Calculations showed that these therapeutic effects were caused without exceeding 15 mg/kg/day cyclopamine dose in this case. Optimization of dosing of a patient takes into account his or her liver and kidney functions and other functions as it has been pointed. Induction of apoptosis of tumor cells can be monitored and tumor imaging can be performed as described above and tests of Hh/Smo signalling activity (e.g. expressions of one or more of patched 1, gli 1, gli 2, gli 3) in suitable cells from the patient (e.g. skin cells or others) can also be performed by known methods. Physical examination and observations of this lung cancer patient during and following administration did not reveal an intolerable adverse effect. Notably this patient was diagnosed to have coronary atherosclerosis and had undergone bypass operation and did not show a cardiovascular abnormality during and after non-oral systemic dosing that provided removal of his tumor cells by induction of apoptosis of them. Laboratory examinations of patient following such dosing also showed achievement of the therapeutic objective while preserving normal organ functions (Table 2).
[0086] Table 2 shows results agreeing with the clinical findings of patient that his normal organ functions, including those known to be ultimately depended on Hh/Smo signalling, were preserved while removing tumor cells from him by inducing their apoptosis. Alanine aminotransferase activity in blood serum is known to be a sensitive indicator of hepatocyte damage and increases after such damage. It was normal in the patient. Normal amylase activity is consistent with lack of damage in pancreas. Elevated lactate dehydrogenase activity would be consistent with the induction of apoptosis of tumor cells as this is an enzyme that is typically highly expressed in tumor cells. The slight elevation of bilirubin in blood serum involving mostly the direct bilirubin is interpreted to be due to the amount of the ethanol carrier administered. Normalcy of K.sup.+ concentration in blood serum and red blood cell indices are consistent with lack of erythrocyte lysis or other damage.
[0087] The efficiency of the described induction of apoptosis of tumor cells, while advantageous, is to be taken into consideration in treatment of patients. Uric acid is a metabolite that increases in blood plasma with increased catabolism of nucleic acids. Apoptosis of large numbers of tumor cells causes production of increased quantities of uric acid. Elevation of uric acid in blood plasma can be managed by attending physicians of patient by use of allopurinol and also by fluid loading (e.g. with saline) to enhance excretion of it. The elevated blood serum uric acid in the above lung cancer patient (Table 2) is again consistent with the efficient apoptotic removal of tumor cells from patient by the instant treatment.
[0088] Pharmaceutically acceptable drug molecules that provide selective inhibition of Hh/Smo signalling can be made and used in place of cyclopamine for practice of the instant tumor treatment of patients having a tumor where Hh/Smo signalling is utilized for inhibition of differentiation and for inhibition of apoptosis of tumor cells. Such a drug molecule can be derived from cyclopamine without a priori restriction of structural features as long as the derivative performs the function of cyclopamine. Cyclopamine is known to be a selective inhibitor of Hh/Smo signalling and the above pointed nature of the target tumors of instant treatment also calls for use of a pharmaceutically acceptable molecule that provides selective inhibition of Hh/Smo signalling for the described treatment. Molecules that provide selective inhibition of Hh/Smo signalling and having no structural relation to cyclopamine are known and can be newly identified by use of known screening methods (e.g. Sasaki H et al, Development 1997; 124; 1313-1322) and testing of positives in a known animal model (e.g. Ericson J et al, Cell 1996; 87:661-673; Incardona J P et al, Development 1998; 125:3553-3562; Stenkamp D L et al, Developmental Biology 2000; 220:238-252; Nasevicius A et al, Nature Genetics 2000; 26:216-220).
[0089] These examples illustrate effectiveness of the described treatment in the causations of tumor cell differentiation and apoptosis and in obtaining rapid clinical regression of the tumors displaying hedgehog/smoothened signalling. Effectiveness on several independent tumors in unrelated patients with differing genotypes is consistent with the general utility of the described treatment.
[0090] Of the numerous substances known in the art to display inhibitory activity on tumor cell proliferation, only a small minority prove to be usable or effective in the treatment of tumors in patients. A major reason for this is the causation of harm also to the normal cells (particularly to the progenitor and stem cells) and the development of intolerable adverse effects. As hedgehog/smoothened signalling is well known to be employed by several normal cell types and for the maintenance of stem cells (Zhang Y et al (2001) Nature 410:599-604), use of cyclopamine on tumors of patients would have been anticipated to lead to adverse effects, especially on the normal tissues around tumors that are exposed to the same schedule and doses of cyclopamine as the tumors. However, treatment with cyclopamine under the described conditions has not revealed undue adverse effects on normal tissue components (including the putative stem cells) by histological/immunohistochemical criteria. Moreover, former skin sites of cyclopamine application that have been followed up more than 31 months at the time of this writing continue to display healthy-looking normal skin and hair, suggesting functional preservation as well of the stem cells and long-term safety. Our finding that a transient exposure to cyclopamine can suffice for the causations of tumor cell differentiation and apoptosis is further surprising and facilitates treatment of internal tumors as well. The term transient administration of cyclopamine for treatment as used here means administration of cyclopamine for a period that is short enough so that causation of the apoptosis and/or differentiation of the normal tissue cells do not happen to such an extend to lead to intolerable adverse effects. We describe in this invention that tumor cells can be caused to undergo apoptosis and/or differentiation in vivo much faster than normal tissue cells so that during the same period of exposure to cyclopamine relatively much smaller proportion or no normal tissue cells undergo cyclopamine-induced apoptosis and/or differentiation, making thereby the clinically detectable or intolerable adverse effects minimal or nonexistent. It is also clear that the therapeutic effectiveness described herein and the rapid disappearance of treated tumors could not be possible without the causation of tumor cell apoptosis since merely inhibiting or slowing the tumor cell proliferation by cyclopamine would, at best, help one only to keep the tumor at its pre-treatment size.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Induction of the Differentiation and Apoptosis of Basal Cell Carcinoma Cells by Topical Cyclopamine Peripheral Non-Palisading Palisading Cells Cells of of the BCC's the BCC's Treated with Treated with Placebo Cyclopamine Placebo Cyclopamine % of Cells 0 ± 0 20 ± 8 0.2 ± 0.4 18 ± 11 showing ≧2 Morphological Signs of Apoptosis on H&E Stained Tissue Sections % of Cells Labelled 100 ± 0 0 ± 0 91 ± 8 0 ± 0 with Ber-Ep4 % of Cells Labelled 58 ± 27 16 ± 11 67 ± 22 5 ± 3 with DO-7 Means ± standard deviations from at least 16 randomly selected high-power (1000 X) fields of the tissue sections of each tumor group are shown. p < 0.001 for the placebo vs. cyclopamine-treated tumors for all the parameters, both for the palisading peripheral and the non-palisading (interior) tumor areas.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Examples Of Clinical laboratory Test Results Showing Preservation Of The Normal Cells and Normal Organ Functions Of Patient Following Systemic Dosing With A Medicament Comprised Of A Selective Inhibitor Of Hedgehog/Smoothened Signaling Result Of Analyte Measurement In Patient Referans Range Alanine aminotransferase 35 IU/L 5-41 Amylase 30 IU/L <90 Aspartate aminotransferase 47 IU/L 6-38 Lactate dehydrogenase 1070 IU/L 240-480 Uric acid 13.2 mg/dL 3.4-7.0 Total bilirubin 2.33 mg/dL <1.1 Direct bilirubin 1.57 mg/dL <0.3 K.sup.+ 4.59 mM 3.5-5.5 Erythrocyte count 4.43 × 10.sup.6/ μL 4.00-5.80 Hemoglobin 11.7 g/dL 12.0-17.5 White blood cell count 11.5 × 10.sup.3/ μL 4.5-11.0 Blood samples of the lung cancer patient in the exemplification were analysed following non-oral systemic dosing of the patient with a medicament comprised of cyclopamine (18 mM) in 98% ethanol, 2% phosphate buffered saline pH 7.4.