1. Academic Validation
  2. A randomized controlled trial of octreotide pamoate long-acting release and carboplatin versus carboplatin alone in dogs with naturally occurring osteosarcoma: evaluation of insulin-like growth factor suppression and chemotherapy

A randomized controlled trial of octreotide pamoate long-acting release and carboplatin versus carboplatin alone in dogs with naturally occurring osteosarcoma: evaluation of insulin-like growth factor suppression and chemotherapy

  • Clin Cancer Res. 2002 Jul;8(7):2406-12.
Chand Khanna 1 Jennifer Prehn David Hayden Ryan D Cassaday Jana Caylor Shevin Jacob Seuli M Bose Sung-Hyeok Hong Stephen M Hewitt Lee J Helman
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Pediatric Oncology Branch, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. [email protected]
PMID: 12114446
Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this research was to determine whether insulin-like growth factor (IGF) suppression, using a long-acting analogue of somatostatin (OncoLAR, octreotide pamoate long-acting release), will decrease chemotherapy resistance by eliminating an important survival signal to osteosarcoma (OSA) cells in a relevant naturally occurring Cancer model. EXPERIMNETAL DESIGN: We conducted a randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled preclinical study in pet dogs with naturally occurring OSA. The study compared primary tumor necrosis and Apoptosis, and survival of pet dogs receiving OncoLAR and carboplatin chemotherapy compared with dogs receiving placebo and carboplatin.

Results: Dogs receiving OncoLAR had suppression of serum IGF levels by approximately 43% without toxicity. No differences in primary tumor necrosis, Apoptosis, tumor IGF mRNA expression, or survival were seen between the dogs receiving OncoLAR plus chemotherapy compared with OncoLAR alone.

Conclusion: The suppression of IGF levels by the extent and/or duration achieved in the trial was not sufficient to improve chemotherapy-related antitumor effects in pet dogs with OSA.

Figures
Products