Abstract
Treatment of recurrent or unresectable cutaneous and subcutaneaous tumors continues to be a major therapeutic challenge. Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is a palliative treatment of cutaneous and subcutaneous tumor nodules for which standard treatments (e.g. radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and surgery) have failed or proved to be insufficient. ECT combines the electropulsation of tumor cells (by local application of electric pulses) and the administration of antineoplastic drugs such as cisplatin or bleomycin (either intravenous or intratumoral). The permeability of the cancer cells to these poorly permeant anti-tumor drugs is transiently increased up to a hundred-fold. ECT is thus an efficient loco-regional therapy for palliative treatment of unresectable recurrent tumor nodules with overall objective response rates of approximatively 80-90% and has satisfactory cosmetic results. The next challenge for ECT is the treatment of deep-seated tumors and metastases. The joint therapy of ECT and electrotransfer of immune-stimulating genes or electro-photodynamic therapy could be a promising strategy for cancer eradication.
Keywords: Electrochemotherapy, Electropermeabilization, Cisplatin, Bleomycin, clinical trials, subcutaneaous tumors, electrotransfer, immune-stimulating genes, electro-photodynamic therapy, cancer
Current Pharmaceutical Design
Title:Electrochemotherapy: Progress and Prospects
Volume: 18 Issue: 23
Author(s): Jean-Michel Escoffre and Marie-Pierre Rols
Affiliation:
Keywords: Electrochemotherapy, Electropermeabilization, Cisplatin, Bleomycin, clinical trials, subcutaneaous tumors, electrotransfer, immune-stimulating genes, electro-photodynamic therapy, cancer
Abstract: Treatment of recurrent or unresectable cutaneous and subcutaneaous tumors continues to be a major therapeutic challenge. Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is a palliative treatment of cutaneous and subcutaneous tumor nodules for which standard treatments (e.g. radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and surgery) have failed or proved to be insufficient. ECT combines the electropulsation of tumor cells (by local application of electric pulses) and the administration of antineoplastic drugs such as cisplatin or bleomycin (either intravenous or intratumoral). The permeability of the cancer cells to these poorly permeant anti-tumor drugs is transiently increased up to a hundred-fold. ECT is thus an efficient loco-regional therapy for palliative treatment of unresectable recurrent tumor nodules with overall objective response rates of approximatively 80-90% and has satisfactory cosmetic results. The next challenge for ECT is the treatment of deep-seated tumors and metastases. The joint therapy of ECT and electrotransfer of immune-stimulating genes or electro-photodynamic therapy could be a promising strategy for cancer eradication.
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Cite this article as:
Escoffre Jean-Michel and Rols Marie-Pierre, Electrochemotherapy: Progress and Prospects, Current Pharmaceutical Design 2012; 18 (23) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161212801227087
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161212801227087 |
Print ISSN 1381-6128 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-4286 |
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