Long-term outcome of phase I/II clinical trial of Ad-OC-TK/VAL gene therapy for hormone-refractory metastatic prostate cancer |
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Authors: | Shirakawa Toshiro Terao Shuji Hinata Nobuyuki Tanaka Kazushi Takenaka Atsushi Hara Isao Sugimura Kazuro Matsuo Masafumi Hamada Katsuyuki Fuji Kohzo Okegawa Takatsugu Higashihara Eiji Gardner Thomas A Kao Chinghai Chung Leland W K Kamidono Sadao Fujisawa Masato Gotoh Akinobu |
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Affiliation: | International Center for Medical Research and Treatment, Kobe University School of Medicine, Kobe 650-0017, Japan. toshiro@med.kobe-u.ac.jp |
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Abstract: | We evaluated the long-term safety and efficacy of Ad-OC-TK (recombinant adenoviral vector carrying an osteocalcin promoter-driven herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene) plus VAL (valacyclovir) gene therapy for hormone-refractory prostate cancer. Ad-OC-TK/VAL therapy is the first in vivo adenovirus-mediated gene therapy to be used to treat metastatic prostate cancer, including bone metastasis. Six patients were enrolled in this trial, and two doses of Ad-OC-TK (2.5 x 10(9) or 2.5 x 10(10) plaque-forming units) were injected into locally recurrent tumor or bone metastasis on day 1 and day 8. Patients were also given VAL (3 g/day) for 21 days. Safety and efficacy were evaluated for at least 8 months in each patient. All patients tolerated this therapy with no serious adverse events. One prostate-specific antigen (PSA) response (from 318.3 to 4.9 ng/ml) was observed with a time to PSA progression (TTP) of 12 months. Docetaxel (30 mg/m2 per week) and estramustine (560 mg/day) combination chemotherapy (DE) was given to three docetaxel-naive patients on PSA failure after gene therapy. All three patients had a PSA response to DE therapy with 21, 7, and 4 months of TTP. These results suggest that additional trials are warranted. |
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