Abstract
We examined the effects of the synthetic matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor batimastat (BB-94) on lung colonization and spontaneous metastasis of a rat mammary carcinoma, HOSP.1P. This tumor expresses both latent and active forms of the matrix metalloproteinases MMP-2 and MMP-9, although the former, as in human breast cancer, is the most prominent. Administrtion of batimastat (6 ¢ 30 mg/kg i.p.) inhibited by up to 80% both the number and median weights of HOSP.1P lung colonies following i.v. inoculation of cells. This implies an effect both on seeding efficiency and subsequent tumor development. In spontaneous metastasis assays, limited treatment with batimastat (commencing when s.c. tumors were established and continuing until 5 or 14 days after their surgical removal) significantly inhibited lung metastasis but had little effect on lymphatic metastasis. However, when treatment was initiated 2 days prior to surgery and continued until day 70, 100% of animals survived to day 120 when there was no evidence of metastatic disease. All control animals (n = 25) in two separate experiments died before day 100 with lymphatic, lung, and extrapulmonary metastases. Taken together, these data suggest that lymphatic dissemination by HOSP.1P tumor cells is less susceptible to inhibition by botimastat than vascular invasion, but that long-term treatment can effectively prevent the outgrowth of putative micrometastases in both lymph nodes and lungs, allowing sustained tumor-free survival.
Footnotes
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↵1 This work was supported by British Biotech Pharmaceuticals.
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↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addresed. Phone: (0044) 181 643 8901 ext 4210; Fax: (0044) 181 643 0223; E-mail: suzan@icr.ac.uk.
- Received December 18, 1995.
- Accepted April 16, 1996.
- ©1996 American Association for Cancer Research.