[0001] The present invention relates to drug delivery articles, usually microspheres, formed
of a polymer matrix and at least two drugs, the drugs being releasable from the polymer
matrix. The drugs are for treatment of cancer, especially solid tumours.
[0002] Combination therapy has been the basis for most success stories in cancer treatment,
which is understandable when components of a combination have a favourable pharmacological
interaction (same target, but different large-organ toxicities). Combination therapy
with multiple drugs is a clinically common procedure in tumour treatment. The most
common therapeutic regimens for ovarian, prostate or uterine cancer are based in combination
of two antitumor drugs. This type of therapy could offer the advantage of increasing
the tumoricidal efficacy and reducing the side effects caused by the high-dose of
a single drug. Irinotecan is indicated in combination with 5-FU for the treatment
of patients with advanced colorectal cancer and it has been used with success in combination
with other agents such as epirubicin, mitomycin or capecitabine to treat breast cancer
(
Becerra 2004, Oncology, 18, 46-48), ovarian cancer (
Nishino et al. 2005, Gynecol Oncol, 97, 893-897) or gastric cancer (
Baek et al. 2006, Br J Cancer, 25, 312-320) respectively.
[0003] A more recent foundation for the success of some cancer treatments involves a mechanistic
basis, under which a combination of drugs is used to affect different molecular targets
to circumvent resistance. A barrier to major advancements in combination therapy,
however, has been a lack of understanding about the intersection of critical signalling
pathways. Synergy might be induced through the effect of drugs on the same as well
as parallel pathways. Because the number of drug combinations is limitless, a strategy
for determining the most promising combinations and prioritizing their evaluation
is crucial.
[0004] Mathematical modelling and computer simulations are used to calculate the expected
effect of different drug combinations in an effort to better understand how chemotherapeutic
combinations might be used clinically. In vivo, favourable synergistic drug combinations
may result in increased efficacy, decreased dosage, reduced toxicity, and minimized
development of resistance. The Median Effect Equation (
Chou J. Biol. Chem. 1977, 252(18), 6438-6442) and Combination Index Equation (
Chou-Talalay T.I.P.S. Nov. 1983 450-454) are two such treatments in which the isobologram curves generated represent additive,
synergistic, or antagonistic interactions caused by different drug combinations. The
concept behind and applications of surface response models encompasses the joint effect
of two active agents which can be viewed as a three-dimensional response surface.
While these models for assessing joint action are the most comprehensive, they are
also highly complex and difficult to create. Indeed, it is recognised that the true
link between empirical synergy and the underlying biochemical, molecular, and physiological
mechanisms is very difficult to discover.
[0005] A fluorescence-based, high-throughput system, called digital image microscopy-based
cytotoxicity assay (DIMSCAN), exists for in vitro testing of cytostatic or cytotoxic
drug combinations. There are five principles for this type of testing: (a) the assay
system should have a wide dynamic range, ideally 3 to 4 logs of cell kill; (b) the
cell line panel should employ multiple cell lines, including drug-resistant lines;
(c) major mechanisms of resistance should be identified and used to structure the
cell line panel; (d) exposure to drugs should be at clinically achievable levels and
schedules; and (e) because hypoxia may antagonize drug action, it is essential to
test under hypoxic conditions. The best approach for selecting drug combinations for
evaluation is the one based on molecular targets; studies should first be performed
in vitro and then confirmed with in vivo models before clinically testing the drug
combination. Drug antagonism is also frequently used to exclude drug combinations.
[0006] There are known synergistic interactions between novel signal transduction modulators
and established cytotoxic agents, cell cycle inhibitors, and differentiation inducers.
While the first type of drug combination involves toxic concentrations of the cytotoxic
agent to produce modest potentiation in vitro, the second and third types induce a
high degree of synergism at concentrations of both agents that are nontoxic (ineffective)
when given individually. Drug combinations between cell cycle inhibitors or these
agents and differentiation inducers have also been shown to produce significant synergistic
activity in vitro. The number of signal transduction modulator combinations associated
with synergistic interactions of cell death is virtually limitless. Whether these
combinations are therapeutically superior to those between conventional cytotoxic
agents or those between conventional and novel agents and whether they represent a
new paradigm for combination chemotherapy remains to be determined.
[0007] Celator Technologies, Inc., in Canada, have reported on commercial solutions for
bringing effective drug combinations to the clinic. Celator is working on the identification
of critical ratios at which drug combinations act synergistically to kill tumour cells,
with the objective of fixing those synergistic ratios in a liposome-based delivery
vehicle (CombiPlex) designed to target tumors following i.v. injection. Here, whilst
the
in vitro synergistic activity depends on specific drug ratios, the in vivo activity depends
on maintaining these synergistic ratios. The drugs are incorporated jointly into the
liposomes. Their systems have been described in patent publications, such as
WO2003028696,
WO2004087115,
WO2004087105,
WO2004093795,
WO2006055903, and in
Tardi, P. G. et al, (2007) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1768, 678-587.
[0008] Microspheres offer a particularly versatile platform for delivery of drug combinations.
Sharma et al have investigated microspheres for inhalation of drug combinations to
treat tuberculosis (
Sharma R, et al, 2001, Pharm Research, 18, 1405-1410). Drug therapy of tuberculosis (TB) requires long-term oral administration of multiple
drugs for curing as well as preventing and/or combating multi-drug resistance. Persistent,
high blood levels of antitubercular drugs resulting from prolonged oral administration
of anti-TB drugs may be neither necessary nor sufficient to kill mycobacteria residing
in macrophages (Mφ). Inhalable biodegradable microparticles containing two of the
first-line anti-TB drugs, isoniazid (H), and rifampicin (R), were prepared and tested
for (i) phagocytosis by mouse Mφ (ii) administration as a dry powder inhalation to
rats, and (iii) targeting alveolar Mφ with high drug doses when administered to rats.
Results showed that such microspheres with multiple drugs offer promise for dose and
dose-frequency reduction, toxicity alleviation and targeting of Mφ-resident persistent
mycobacteria.
[0009] In another study (
Gupte A & Ciftci K, 2004, Int. J. Pharm,. 276(1-2):93-106.), the combination (Paclitaxel + 5-FU microspheres) was compared with a single drug
chemotherapy (Paclitaxel and 5-FU microspheres) against metastatic breast cancer cell
line (MDA-MB 435 S). The physicochemical characteristics of the microspheres (i.e.
encapsulation efficiency, particle size distribution, in vitro release, thermal characteristics)
were studied. The results demonstrated that the encapsulation efficiency of Paclitaxel
was high (90%) when the drug was encapsulated in poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA)
microparticles with or without 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). However, the encapsulation efficiency
of 5-FU was low (19%) and increased to 30% when the drug was encapsulated with Paclitaxel.
The mean particle size of microspheres was 2.5 µm and were spherical in shape. The
in vitro release of both 5-FU and Paclitaxel from the microspheres was relatively
fast initially followed by a slower and more controlled release. The cytotoxic activity
of Paclitaxel microspheres was far greater compared to either the microspheres containing
5-FU + Paclitaxel or 5-FU alone. Overall results demonstrated that incorporation of
Paclitaxel or 5-FU in microspheres enhances the cytotoxicity in more controlled manner
compared to that of free drugs and also that careful consideration should be made
when combining drugs acting in different phases of cell cycle.
[0010] Others have investigated drug combinations in microspheres to target restenosis (
Chandy et al, 2001, Development of Poly(Lactic Acid)/Chitosan Co-Matrix Microspheres:
Controlled Release of Taxol-Heparin for Preventing Restenosis, Drug delivery, 8, 77-86). Smooth muscle cell proliferation plays a major role in the genesis of restenosis
after angioplasty or vascular injury. Controlled release of appropriate drugs alone
and in combinations is one approach for treating coronary obstructions, balloon angioplasty,
restenosis associated with thrombosis, and calcification. Chady et al, demonstrated
the possibility of encapsulating taxol-loaded polylactic acid (PLA) microspheres within
heparin-chitosan spheres to develop a prolonged release co-matrix form. The in vitro
release profile of taxol and heparin from this co-matrix system was monitored in phosphate
buffered saline pH 7.4, using an ultraviolet spectrophotometer. The amount of taxol/heparin
release was initially much higher, followed by a constant slow release profile for
a prolonged period. The initial burst release of taxol (15.8%) and heparin (32.7%)
from the co-matrix was modified with polyethylene glycol coatings (13.5% and 25.4%,
respectively, for 24 hr). From scanning electron microscopy studies, it appears that
these drugs diffuse out slowly to the dissolution medium through the micropores of
the co-matrix. However, the surface micropores were modified with polyethylene glycol
(PEG) coatings for a constant slow release profile. They concluded that this PEG-coated
PLA/chitosan co-matrix may target drug combinations having synergistic effects for
prolonged periods to treat restenosis.
[0011] Cardiovascular stents coated with a combination of drugs have been described for
reducing restenosis rate. Restenosis is a hyper proliferative disease. For instance
EP-A-551162 discloses a combination of rapamycin and mycophenolic acid, an anti-proliferative
agent, but does not give details of how a stent is to be impregnated with the actives.
In
EP-A-0568130 rapamycin and heparin are administered to prevent smooth muscle hyperplasia, e.g.
by delivery from an impregnated stent. No details are given of impregnation methods.
[0012] WO-A-2003022807 describes administration of a rapamycin analogue from a stent coated with a polymer.
The drug is loaded by dipping the polymer coated stent into a solution of the drug
and drying. In addition a further drug such as an anti-miotic, anti-proliferative
or anti-inflammatory agent may be administered from the stent. Polymers include among
many others polyvinyl alcohol, hyaluronic acid and copolymers of phosphorylcholine
methacrylate (MPC), nonionic comonomers and crosslinking monomers, and these last
mentioned copolymers are exemplified in
in vitro tests, with a rapamycin analogue alone. In
WO2004/022124 a rapamycin analogue and a dexamethasone are jointly loaded into a crosslinked MPC
copolymer with non-ionic comonomer on a stent. The polymer used in these specifications
has a water-swellability of about 50%.
[0013] 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) in combination with leucovorin (LV) is nowadays the standard
treatment in colon cancer.
Lamprecht et al (Eur J Pharm and Biopharm, 2005, 59, 367-371) used Eudragit P-4135F or Eudragit RS100 separately to prepare microspheres by an
oil/oil emulsification process trapping 5-FU and LV simultaneously. Scanning electron
microscopy permitted a structural analysis, process parameters were analyzed and drug
loading and release profiles were recorded. Particle size varied between 123 (RS100)
and 146 µm (P-4135F). Generally, higher encapsulation rates were found with RS100
(5-FU, 60.3±9.7%; LV, 81.4±8.6%) compared to P-4135F (5-FU, 48.3±2.0%; LV, 55.4±2.7%).
These Eudragit polymers are acrylic copolymers including quaternary ammonium group
containing alkyl methacrylate monomers. They are not crosslinked. Microparticles made
from Eudragit RS100 released the incorporated drug combination within 8 h. P-4135F
was found to maintain the undesired 5-FU release at pH 6.8 lower than 25% within 4
h while at pH 7.4, a nearly immediate release (within 15 min) was observed. Although
the release was similar at pH 7.4, at pH 6.8 LV showed a distinct initial drug loss
of about 60% and a complete release within 2 h. SEM analyses revealed a substantial
presence of LV crystals on the particle surface provoking a distinct burst effect
of LV. These observations were concluded to be related to the high lipophilicity of
P-4135F provoking a separation between P-4135F and LV during the preparation process.
[0014] Liu et al. (J. Pharm. Pharmacol., 55, 1063-1073, 2003) and in
WO9850018 describe the use of biodegradable sulfopropyl dextran microspheres for intratumoural
injection. In the method microspheres containing doxorubicin are co-administered with
microspheres containing verapamil. Following intratumoural injection in mice of doxorubicin-loaded
microspheres, alone or in combination with verapamil-loaded microspheres, the tumour
diameter was measured serially as an indication of therapeutic effect, while the weight,
appearance, and behaviour of the mice were monitored as an indication of general toxicity.
Intratumoural injections of doxorubicin-loaded microspheres were tolerated much better
than systemic administration of equivalent drug concentrations. There was a modest
(up to 34%) delay of tumour growth compared with groups receiving no treatment or
blank microspheres. Co-injection of verapamil microspheres with doxorubicin microspheres
produced a moderate increase in toxicity but no further delay in tumour growth. Controlled-release
microsphere formulations of anticancer agents administered intratumourally were described
as an efficient way to deliver high drug doses to the tumour with little systemic
toxicity. The sulpho-propylated dextran microspheres used had been supplied as ion-exchange
media (Sephadex SP25). They are biodegradable. They are swellable in distilled water
to give a volume ratio of microspheres in the swollen state to dry state of about
12. The microspheres have an ion-exchange capacity of about 2.5 meq/g at pH 7.
[0015] Liu et al. in (2000) J. Pharm. Sci: 8-9(6) 807-817 have also described ways of modifying the surface of the sulpho-propylated microspheres
with hydrophobic moieties or with cationic polymers. Cationic polymer modification
reduces the swellability ratio and ion-exchange capacity. The surface conjugation
of hydrophobic groups affects the rate of swelling in water but does not reduce the
extent of swelling at equilibrium verapamil loaded at a more rapid rate into the polymer
treated microspheres.
[0016] Doxorubicin eluting beads have been shown to be effective in the treatment of HCC
by chemoembolisation (
Varela et al., 2007, J Hepatology, 46, 474-81). Microspheres for delivering doxorubicin to solid tumours by chemoembolisation are
described in
WO2004071495. The microspheres are formed of a matrix of water-swellable anionically charged crosslinked
polyvinyl alcohol and have diameters when swollen in water in the range 40 to 1500
µm.
[0018] Ibuprofen is an non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), which acts by inhibition
of the enzymes cyclooxygenase I and II. Many authors have studied the use of NSAIDs
for treatment and prevention of cancer risk (
Sawaoka et al. 1998, J Clin Gastroenterol, 27, 47-52;
Shen et al. 1998, Cancer Research, 58, 362-366). COX-2 selective NSAIDs have also demonstrated a reduction in cancer cell invasion
and liver metastases (
Yamauchi et al. 2003, Anticancer Res, 23, 245-249;
Yao et al. 2004, Br J Cancer, 90, 712-719) and inhibition of COX-2 resulted in reduced tumour size and increased survival (
Cui et al. 2005, Clin Cancer Res, 11, 8213-8221;
Murata et al. 2005, Dig Dis Sci, 50, 70-75). Ibuprofen has been investigated in the treatment and prevention of a number of
tumours. In
WO2006013376 we describe the use of microspheres loaded with various COX inhibitors for embolisation
showing elution rates and localisation which lead to an expectation that an effect
would be shown on tumourigenesis.
[0019] In
WO2007090897, we describe methods of loading water-swellable polymers, such as microspheres, with
drugs having a very low solubility, but which are soluble in an organic solvent, in
which a solvent based solution of the drug is contacted with substantially dry polymer
matrix, so that swelling of the matrix in the drug solution takes place, followed
by precipitation of the drug in the matrix of the polymer by contacting with a precipitant,
usually water. The method is suitable for loading paclitaxel, dexamethasone or rapamycin.
The polymer matrix is a crosslinked polyvinyl alcohol based material, usually having
pendent anionic groups, such as sulphonate groups.
[0020] In
WO2006027567 we describe microspheres, for chemoembolisation of solid tumours comprising a water-swellable
polymer which is anionically charged at pH 7 and, electrostatically associated with
the polymer in releasable form, a cationically charged camptothecin compound, such
as irinotecan. We have shown that chemoembolisation using these beads for treatment
of liver metastases from colorectal cancer leads to a reduction in tumour volume.
[0021] In
WO 2004/071495 we describe a composition for chemoembotheapy of solid tumours comprising particles
of a water-insoluble, water-swellable synthetic anionic polymer and, absorbed therein
an anthracycline. Preferably the polymer is a poly (vinyl alcohol) based polymer and
the drug is doxorubicin.
[0022] According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a composition
comprising a population of microspheres each of which has a polymer matrix and, jointly
incorporated into the matrix, a first and a second pharmaceutically active compound,
wherein the polymer is a water-insoluble water-swellable polymer which is anionically
charged, the first active is cationically charged and the second active is electrostatically
neutral, and one of the actives is a cytotoxic compound and the other active has activity
complementary to the cytotoxic compound in tumour treatment.
[0023] In this aspect of the invention, the first cationically charged active may be the
cytotoxic compound. Alternatively the second active may be the cytotoxic compound,
while the first cationic active has activity complementary to the cytotoxic compound
in tumour treatment. Ionically charged actives tend to be water-soluble at a relatively
high level, for instance at a level of at least 50 g/l, preferably at least 100 g/l.
The second active, which is electrostatically neutral, may be less water-soluble,
for instance having a low solubility in water, less than 10 g/l, at room temperature.
We have found that for the combination of cationic and nonionic drugs, there is little
or no interference with the loading or release rate of each active by the other. This
result is surprising and allows the ready determination of suitable dosages and ratios
of composition which are optimised for efficacy. The composition will contain particles
of a single type which avoids problems of separation causing dosage uncertainties.
[0024] The second active has an activity which is complementary to the cytotoxic compound
in tumour treatment. The compound may itself be efficacious in treatment of tumours,
for instance be capable of preventing growth or reducing the size of a tumour, for
instance when delivered locally, or systemically. The active may alternatively be
a compound which sensitises the tumour to activity by the first active. In general
the combination of compounds may be identified as one which has a combination index
based on the Chou-Talalay index (1983,
op. cit), of less than 0.90, more preferably less than 0.5, for instance less than 0.3, even
as low as 0.1 or below.
[0025] Values for the combination index are determined, conveniently, using the software
package Calcusyn (Biosoft), which is a dose effect analysis programme utilising the
general equation for dose effect relationships derived by Chou:

where
D: the dose of drug
Dm: the median-effect dose signifying the potency. It is determined from the x-intercept
of the median-effect plot.
fa: the fraction affected by the dose
fu: the fraction unaffected, fu=1-fa
m: an exponent signifying the sigmoidicity (shape) of the dose effect curve. It is
determined by the slope of the median effect plot.
[0026] The alternative forms of the median-effect equation are:

[0027] From Eq. 2, if D
m and m are known, the effect (f
a) can be determined for any dose (D).
[0028] From Eq. 3, if Dm and m are known, the dose (D) or (D
x) can be determined for any effect (f
a). Thus, D
m and m parameters representing the potency and shape, respectively, determine the
entire dose-effect curve.
[0029] The median-effect plot is a plot of x = log (D) vs y = log (f
a/f
u) introduced by Chou in 1976 (
Chou J. Th. Biol. 59, 253-276). It is based on the logarithmic form of Chou's median effect equation [Eq. 1]:

[0030] Eq. 4 has the form of a straight line, y = mx + b.
[0031] Thus, the slope yields m value and the x-intercept yields log (D
m) value, and thus, the D
m value. The D
m can also be determined by: D
m = 10
-(y-intercept)/m).
[0032] Note that f
a/f
u = f
a/(1-f
a) = (f
u)
-1-1 = [(f
a)
-1-1]
-1. The goodness of fit for the data to the median-effect equation is represented by
the linear correlation coefficient r of the median-effect plot. Usually, the experimental
data from enzyme or receptor systems have r > 0.96, from tissue culture r > 0.90;
and from animal systems, r > 0.85.
[0033] The combination index (CI) equation is based on the multiple drug-effect equation
of Chou-Talalay derived from enzyme kinetic models. An equation determines only the
additive effect rather than synergism or antagonism. However, we define synergism
as a more than expected additive effect, and antagonism as a less than expected additive
effect. Chou and Talalay in 1983 (
op. cit) proposed the designation of CI = 1 as the additive effect, thus from the multiple
drug effect equation of two drugs, we obtain:
Classical: for mutually exclusive drugs that have the same or similar modes of action:

Conservative: for mutually non-exclusive drugs that have totally independent modes
of action:

[0034] Eq. 5 or Eq. 6 dictates that drug 1, (D)
1, and drug 2, (D)
2, (in the numerators) in combination inhibit x% in the actual experiment. Thus, the
experimentally observed x% inhibition may not be around number but most frequently
has a decimal fraction. (D
x)
1 and (D
x)
2 (in the denominators) of Eq. 5 or 6 are the doses of drug 1 and drug 2 alone, respectively,
inhibiting x%. D
x can be readily calculated from Eq. 3.
[0035] It is worth noting that each drug alone should have a dose-effect relationship. Both
potency (D
m) and shape (m) parameters are essential for determining synergism or antagonism.
If one of the two drugs has no effect by itself, then synergism/antagonism cannot
be determined. Instead, potentiation (augmentation, enhancement) or inhibition (suppression)
can be determined.
[0036] Calcusyn requires the dose-effect relationship for each drug and then for combinations.
Although the experimental data from the combined study is preferably collected using
a constant ratio, combination indices may nevertheless be determined from non-constant
ratios of the two components.
[0037] The combination index may be determined for any
in vitro or in vivo test method. In the present invention, it is most convenient for the combination
index to be determined
in vitro using a cell culture based test, for instance on a cell line of cells representing
a useful
in vitro test for determining
in vivo efficacy. For instance the test may determine the cytotoxicity of the individual
drugs and then of the combination, and these data used to calculate the combination
index. In the test, the drugs may be contacted with the cells in solution, or in some
other form. The effect which is to be measured is cytotoxicity, such as reduction
in 50% viable cell count compared to control after a given period such as 24 or 48
hours. It is not necessary for the drugs to be incorporated into a polymer matrix,
for instance in the form of microspheres, to carry out the test. However it is preferred
that the combination index is determined to be less than 1 when the drugs are delivered
from a polymer matrix, for instance in the form of microspheres as defined in the
present claims. In this case, the combination of drugs tested may involve separate
particles, each loaded with one of the drugs or each particle may be jointly loaded
with both the drugs. A suitable test is described in Examples 6 and 7 below. Where
separate particles are each loaded with one of the drugs it should be checked that,
for the joint-loaded particles the elution rate of each drug is not significantly
affected by the other if it is to be assumed that the determined CI value will apply
to the joint-loaded product. In this aspect of the invention the combination of pharmaceutically
active compounds is one which has a CI of less than 1.0 in an
in vitro cytotoxicity test on a tumour cell line at a ratio within a multiple of 5 (either
way) of the ratio in the composition. Where the composition is for treatment of a
hepatocellular carcinoma the cell line used to determine the CI is preferably a hepatocellular
carcinoma cell line. Where the composition is for treating pancreatic carcinoma, the
cell line is preferably a pancreatic carcinoma cell line. The CI should preferably
be the defined low value when the active compounds are tested at a ratio within a
multiple of 2 either way of the ratio in the composition.
[0038] A cytotoxic agent is one that is directly toxic to cells, preventing their reproduction
or growth. Suitable cytotoxic agents are, for instance, anthracycline compounds such
as doxorubicin and other compounds disclosed in
WO04071495, camptothecin derivatives as described in
WO2006027567, taxanes, platinum-based neoplastic anti-metabolites such as 5-FU, mercaptopurine,
capecitabine other cytotoxic antibiotics such as actinomycin D and vinca alkaloids,
including vinblastine, vincristine, vindesine and vinorelbine. Examples of cytarabine,
gemcitabine, cyclophosphamide, fludaribine, camptothecin compounds such as topotecan
and irinotecan, clorambucil, busulfan, mitoxantrone, retinoids, anagrelide etc.
[0039] The active which provides complementary activity may be a cytostatic compound. Cytostatic
compounds may be defined as compounds that inhibit or suppress cellular growth or
reproduction. The cytotoxic and cytostatic effects of drugs may be determined by the
person skilled in the art, using suitable tests, such as based on cell lines.
[0040] Suitable cytostatic compounds are rapamycin and analogs.
[0041] Suitable cationically charged compounds are: doxorubicin and other anthracycline
compounds having an amine group as disclosed in
WO04071495 or mitoxantrone, cationic camptothecin derivatives, such as irinotecan, as described
in
WO2006027567, or topotecan, or verapamil.
[0042] One class of cytotoxic or cytostatic compounds which may be used comprises rapamycin
and rapamycin analogues, which target mTOR. Such compounds include sirolimus, temsirolimus,
everolimus, biolimus, ABT-578 and AP23573. Any of the compounds encompassed within
the scope of rapamycin analogues described in
WO-A-2003022807, may be used as the rapamycin analogue.
[0043] Where the cytotoxic active is rapamycin or a rapamycin derivative/analogue, the other
active is in one preferred embodiment, doxorubicin or another anthracycline compound
having an amine group as described in
WO04071495.
[0044] The combination of anticancer drug rapamycin and doxorubicin has been demonstrated
a complete remission of a mouse model of B-cell lymphoma through the reverse of chemoresistance
in lymphomas by rapamycin sensitisation, and induction of apoptosis by doxorubicin
(
Wendel,H-G, et al, 2004, Nature 428, 332-337). In the treatment of leukemias, rapamycin has shown the enhancement of doxorubicin-induced
apoptosis (
Avellino,R. et al, 2005, Blood 106(4), 1400-1406). Combinations of rapamycin or an analogue with an anthracycline compound having
at least one amine group show a low combination index, and are highly effective in
the present invention.
[0045] In another embodiment of this aspect of the present invention the cytotoxic compound
is rapamycin or an analogue and the cationic active is a camptothecin derivative having
a cationic substituent as disclosed in
WO2006027567 or in
EP-A-0321122. Preferably the active is as defined in claim 6. Preferably A is COO. Preferably
AR is substituted in the 10 position.
[0046] According to the first aspect of the present invention, the two drugs are jointly
loaded onto the same microspheres. Where the cytotoxic compound is rapamycin or an
analogue, the active having complementary activity may alternatively be selected from
cisplatin, or other platinum based anti-cancer drug, gemcitabine, tamoxifen or another
anti-estrogen, interferon alpha, epithelial growth factor receptor inhibitor, vascular
endothelial growth factor inhibitor, inhibitors of both VEGFR and EGFR, and Glivec.
The further drug may alternatively be paclitaxel or an analogue, or other microtubule
inhibitor, a topoisomerase inhibitor.
[0047] Combinations of rapamycin with other anticancer agents is also known, and the known
combination disclosed below may be used in this aspect of the invention. Cisplatin,
gemcitabine, tamoxifen, interferon alpha, EGFR inhibitor, VEGFR/EGFR inhibitor and
Gleevec have all been combined with rapamycin analogues in preclinical or clinical
studies, and these combinations may be used in the further aspect of the invention.
[0048] Interactions between rapamycin and chemotherapeutic agents used as first- and second-line
agents against breast cancer have been investigated. In vitro, synergistic interactions
were observed in combinations with paclitaxel, carboplatin, and vinorelbine. Additive
effects were observed in combinations with doxorubicin and gemcitabine. Rapamycin
dramatically enhanced paclitaxel- and carboplatin-induced apoptosis. This effect was
sequence dependent and mediated at least partly through caspase activation. Furthermore,
rapamycin enhanced chemosensitivity to paclitaxel and carboplatin in HER2/neu-overexpressing
cells, suggesting a potential approach to these poorly behaving tumours. In vivo,
rapamycin combined with paclitaxel resulted in a significant reduction in tumour volume
compared with either agent alone in rapamycin-sensitive tumours. (
Mondesire WH, et al., 2004, Clinical Cancer Research, 10, 7031-7042). The combination of a rapamycin or analogue with a taxane may be used in the further
aspect of the invention.
[0049] RAD001 dramatically enhances cisplatin-induced apoptosis in wt p53, but not mutant
p53 tumour cells. RAD001 sensitises cells to cisplatin by inhibiting p53-induced p21
expression. These findings support the molecular rationale for combining DNA damaging
agents such as the platinum cytotoxic with RAD001, showing that a general major anabolic
process may enhance the efficacy of an established drug protocol in the treatment
of patients with solid tumours (
Beuvink I et al 2005, Cell, 120:747-759). The combination of rapamycin or analogues with a platinum anti-neoplastic compound
may be used in the further aspects of the invention.
[0050] CCI-779 and tamoxifen or another anti-estrogen may be useful if administered in combination.
The PI3K/AKY/mTOR pathway may play an important role in the development of tamoxifen
resistance in breast cancer. Activation of the estrogen receptor can drive the PI3K
pathway. Cross talk between erb-1 and ER has been shown to activate the pathway, which
has been associated with estrogen-independent transcriptional activity, and breast
cancer cell lines with activated AKT are resistant to the growth inhibitory effects
of tamoxifen. The combination of rapamycin or an analogue with an anti-estrogen may
be used in this further aspect of the invention.
[0051] There is an ongoing phase III trial comparing orally administered temsirolimus (CCI-779)
plus letrozole (an aromatase inhibitor) versus letrozole alone as first-line treatment
among approximately 1200 postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer. The combination
of rapamycin or an analogue with an aromatase inhibitor may be used in this further
aspect of the invention.
[0052] CCI-779 and interferon alpha have been used in conjunction in treatment of renal
cell carcinoma (RCC). A large phase 3 trial is ongoing. The combination of rapamycin
or an analogue and alpha interferon may be used in this further aspect of the invention.
[0053] Rapamycin with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitor EKI-785 resulted
in synergistic growth inhibition. Similar results were achieved with RAD-001 and VEGFR/EGFR
inhibitor AEE788. Rapamycin with Glivec resulted in synergistic growth inhibition
of CML cell lines. The combination of rapamycin or an analogue with a growth factor
receptor or with Glivec may be used in this further aspect of the invention.
[0054] Other combinations used in the further aspect of the invention include cytotoxic
agents with P-glycoprotein inhibitors. Approximately 50% of cancer patients receive
chemotherapy, and as many as 75% of these patients experience intrinsic or acquired
resistance to a broad spectrum of chemotherapeutic agents. This phenomenon, termed
multidrug resistance (MDR), is the most common cause of chemotherapy failure. It is
well established that the majority of tumours develop MDR through over-expression
of the drug efflux pump P-glycoprotein (P-gp). Inhibition of P-gp is acknowledged
as a viable means of reversing MDR; however, existing P-gp inhibitors so far have
demonstrated limited clinical success due to limitations in potency and specificity.
Verapamil, a calcium channel blocker, is commonly used for the treatment of supraventricular
arrhythmias, coronary heart disease, and arterial hypertension. Furthermore, verapamil
is a potent inhibitor of P-glycoprotein-mediated transport, and has been proven to
modify MDR with cancer chemotherapy in in vitro experiments (
Toffoli G, et al. 1995, Biochem Pharmacol, 50, 1245-55;
Pauli-Magnus C, et al. 2000, J Pharmacol Exp Ther, 293, 376-82). Local delivery of doxorubicin and verapamil from jointly loaded drug eluting beads
may therefore offer a synergistic benefits, allowing high local doses of cytotoxic
agent and P-gp inhibition to overcome any MDR effects. Thus the combination of a cytotoxic
antibiotic and a P-gp inhibitor may be used in the further aspect of this invention.
[0055] Other combinations include topoisomerase inhibitors, such as tecans with other actives
having low Combination Index.
[0056] Other combinations as described by Celator in any of
WO2003028696,
WO2004087115,
WO2004087105,
WO2004093795,
WO2006055903, and in
Tardi, P. G. et al., (2007) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1768, 678-587, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference, may be used in the further
aspect of the invention.
[0057] Taxanes and anti-metabolites may be used in combination, such as paclitaxel and 5-FU.
5FU and leucovorin may be used.
[0058] Where the actives include a camptothecin derivative, it is particularly effective
to use a derivative having cationic substituents, such as compounds of the general
formula I
in which R1 is selected from H, halogen, hydroxyl and lower (C1-6) alkyl, optionally substituted by a hydroxyl, amine, alkoxy, halogen, acyl and acyloxy
groups;
A is C(O)O or CH2; and
R is NR2R3 where R2 and R3 are the same or different and each represents a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted
C1-4 alkyl group or a substituted or unsubstituted carbocyclic or heterocyclic group,
or R2 and R3 together with the nitrogen atom to which they are attached form a optionally substituted
heterocyclic ring which may be interrupted by -O-, -S- or >NR4 in which R4 is a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted C1-4 alkyl group or a substituted or unsubstituted phenyl group;
and wherein the grouping -A-R is bonded to a carbon atom located in any of the 9,
10 or 11 positions in the A ring of the camptothecin compound and R1 is substituted in the A or B ring, including salts thereof.
[0059] In one embodiment the camptothecin derivatives have the formula IA
in which R1 is H, lower (C1-6) alkyl, optionally substituted by a hydroxyl, amine, alkoxy, halogen, acyl or acyloxy
group or halogen; and
R is NR2R3 where R2 and R3 are the same or different and each represents a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted
C1-4 alkyl group or a substituted or unsubstituted carbocyclic or heterocyclic group,
or R2 and R3 together with the nitrogen atom to which they are attached form a optionally substituted
heterocyclic ring which may be interrupted by -O-, -S- or >NR4 in which R4 is a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted C1-4 alkyl group or a substituted or unsubstituted phenyl group;
and wherein the grouping -O-CO-R is bonded to a carbon atom located in any of the
9, 10 or 11 positions in the A ring of the camptothecin compound, including salts
thereof.
[0060] It is preferred for the grouping -O-CO-R to be joined at the 10 position.
[0061] R
1 is preferably C
1-4 alkyl, most preferably ethyl, and m is preferably 1.
[0062] A halogen atom R is, for instance, F, CI, Br or I, preferably F or CI. R
1 to R
4 may be methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, in-butyl, isobutyl and t-butyl, preferably
methyl.
[0063] Substituents in R and R
1 are preferably selected from halogen atoms, hydroxy, C
1-4 alkoxy, phenoxy, COOR
6, SO
3R
6 and PO
3(R
6)
2, aryl,

NR
8R
9 and CONR
8R
9, QAOR
5, QANR
8R
9 and QAQR
5 in which R
5 is C
1-4 alkyl or aryl; R
6 is hydrogen, halogen C
1-4 alkyl or C
1-4 alkoxy; R
7 is hydrogen, halogen or C
1-4 alkyl; R
8 and R
9 are the same or different and each is H, or C
1-4 alkyl or R
8 and R
9 together represent C
3-6 alkanediyl;
Q is OCO, or -COO- and A is C
2-4 alkanediyl.
[0064] Preferably R is NR
3 R
3 where R
2 and R
3 together with the nitrogen atom form a 5 or 6 membered ring, preferably a saturated
ring, with optional substituents. A substituent is preferably -NR
8R
9. In such a substituent R
8 and R
9 preferably together are C
4-5 alkanediyl. Such groups are basic and tend to be cationically charged at pH7. Most
preferably R is

[0065] Another family of suitable compounds has the general formula II

in which R
20 and R
23 are each hydroxy or hydrogen or together are CH
2OCH
2;
one of R
21 and R
22 is H and the other is CH
2NR
24R
25 where R
23 and R
24 are the same or different and each represents a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted
C
1-4 alkyl group or a substituted or unsubstituted carbocyclic or heterocyclic group,
or R
23 and R
24 together with the nitrogen atom to which they are attached form a optionally substituted
heterocyclic ring which may be interrupted by -O-, -S- or >NR
4 in which R
4 is a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted C
1-4 alkyl group or a substituted or unsubstituted phenyl group; including salts and quaternary
derivatives thereof. One example of a suitable compound of this claim is topotecan,
in which R
20 is hydroxyl, R
22 and R
23 are hydrogen, R
21 is CH
2NR
24R
25 and R
24 and R
25 are both methyl.
[0066] The ratio of the first active to the second active is preferably in the range 100:1
to 1:100, preferably in the range 5:1 to 1:5. Suitable ratios may be determined by
a person skilled in the art, for instance by using information available from combination
index determinations. Generally the ratios should be selected so as to optimise the
synergistic effect.
[0067] Preferably the ratio of equivalents of anion in the polymer to cation in the first
active, should be in the range 2:1 to 1:1, preferably around 1:1. By selecting these
ratios optimum loading may be achieved, while minimising the first effect upon initial
administration, and providing optimised extended release.
[0068] The second active used in the invention may alternatively be a COX-inhibitor. COX-inhibitors,
for instance NSAIDs, could act as anti-inflammatory and analgesic agents, targeting
inflammation and pain associated with the chemoembolisation procedure. Furthermore,
up to 50% of the cells in a tumour can be inflammatory cells. Also there have been
numerous studies linking inflammation with angiogenesis and tumour progression. Accordingly
a combination of a cytotoxic agent such as doxorubicin, with a COX-inhibitor may have
highly desirable effects. As indicated above, ibuprofen has even been proposed as
having useful effects on reducing cancer cell invasion and liver metastases.
[0069] The polymer is a water-insoluble material. Although it may be biodegradable, so that
drug may be released substantially by erosion of polymer matrix to release drug from
the surface, preferably the polymer is substantially biostable (i.e. non-biodegradable).
[0070] The polymer is water-swellable. Water-swellable polymer useful in the invention preferably
has an equilibrium water content, when swollen in water at 37°C, measured by gravimetric
analysis, in the range of 40 to 99 wt%, preferably 75 to 95%.
[0071] Generally the polymer is covalently crosslinked, although it may be appropriate for
the polymer to be ionically crosslinked, at least in part, or hydrophobically crosslinked.
In some embodiments it may be suitable to use polymers which are derived from natural
sources, such as albumin, alginate, gelatin, starch, chitosan or collagen, all of
which have been used as embolic agents. In other embodiments the polymer is substantially
free of naturally occurring polymer or derivatives. It is preferably formed by polymerising
ethylenically unsaturated monomers in the presence of di- or higher-functional crosslinking
monomers. The ethylenically unsaturated monomers may include an ionic (including zwitterionic)
monomer.
[0072] Copolymers of hydroxyethyl methacrylate, acrylic acid and cross-linking monomer,
such as ethylene glycol dimethacrylate or methylene bisacrylamide, as used for etafilcon
A based contact lenses may be used. Copolymers of N-acryloyl-2-amino-2-hydroxymethyl-propane-1,3-diol
and N,N-bisacrylamide may also be used.
[0073] Other suitable synthetic polymers are cross-linked styrenic polymers e.g. with ionic
substituents, of the type used as separation media or as ion-exchange media.
[0074] Another type of synthetic polymer which may be used to form the water-swellable water-insoluble
matrix is polyvinyl alcohol crosslinked using aldehyde-type crosslinking agents such
as glutaraldehyde. For such products, the polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) may be rendered
ionic by providing pendant ionic groups by reacting a functional ionic group containing
compound with the hydroxyl groups. Examples of suitable functional groups for reaction
with the hydroxyl groups are acylating agents, such as carboxylic acids or derivatives
thereof, or other acidic groups which may form esters.
[0075] The invention is of particular value where the polymer matrix is formed from a polyvinyl
alcohol macromer, having more than one ethylenically unsaturated pendant group per
molecule, by radical polymerisation of the ethylenic groups. Preferably the PVA macromer
is copolymerised with ethylenically unsaturated monomers for instance including a
nonionic and/or ionic monomer including anionic monomer.
[0076] The PVA macromer may be formed, for instance, by providing PVA polymer of a suitable
molecular weight, such as in the range 1000 to 500,000 D, preferably 10,000 to 100,000
D, with pendant vinylic or acrylic groups. Pendant acrylic groups may be provided,
for instance, by reacting acrylic or methacrylic acid with PVA to form ester linkages
through some of the hydroxyl groups. Other methods for attaching vinylic groups capable
of polymerisation onto polyvinyl alcohol are described in, for instance,
US 4,978,713 and, preferably,
US 5,508,317 and
5,583,163. Thus the preferred macromer comprises a backbone of polyvinyl alcohol to which is
linked, via a cyclic acetal linkage, an (alk)acrylaminoalkyl moiety. Example 1 describes
the synthesis of an example of such a macromer known by the approved name nelfilcon
B. Preferably the PVA macromers have about 2 to 20 pendant ethylenic groups per molecule,
for instance 5 to 10.
[0077] Where PVA macromers are copolymerised with ethylenically unsaturated monomers including
an ionic monomer, the ionic monomer preferably has the general formula II
Y
1BQ
1 II
in which Y
1 is selected from

CH
2=C(R
10)-CH
2-O-, CH
2=C(R
10)-CH
2 OC(O)-, CH
2=C(R
10)OC(O)-, CH
2=C(R
10)-O-, CH
2=C(R
10)CH
2OC(O)N(R
11)-, R
12OOCCR
10=CR
10C(O)-O-, R
10CH=CHC(O)O-, R
10CH=C(COOR
12)CH
2-C(O)-O-,

wherein:
R10 is hydrogen or a C1-C4 alkyl group;
R11 is hydrogen or a C1-C4 alkyl group;
R12 is hydrogen or a C1-4 alkyl group or BQ1 where B and Q1 are as defined below;
A1 is -O- or -NR11-;
K1 is a group -(CH2)rOC(O)-, -(CH2)rC(O)O-, - (CH2)rOC(O)O-, - (CH2)rNR13-, -(CH2)rNR13C(O)-, -(CH2)rC(O)NR13-, -(CH2)rNR13C(O)O-, - (CH2)rOC(O)NR13-, -(CH2)rNR13C(O)NR13- (in which the groups R13 are the same or different), -(CH2)rO-, -(CH2)rSO3-, or, optionally in combination with B, a valence bond and r is from 1 to 12 and
R13 is hydrogen or a C1-C4 alkyl group;
B is a straight or branched alkanediyl, oxaalkylene, alkanediyloxaalkanediyl, or alkanediyloligo(oxaalkanediyl)
chain optionally containing one or more fluorine atoms up to and including perfluorinated
chains or, if Q1 or Y1 contains a terminal carbon atom bonded to B a valence bond; and
Q1 is an anionic group.
[0078] An anionic group Q
1 may be, for instance, a carboxylate, carbonate, sulphonate, sulphate, nitrate, phosphonate
or phosphate group. The monomer may be polymerised as the free acid or in salt form.
Preferably the pK
a of the conjugate acid is less than 5.
[0079] A suitable cationic group Q
1 is preferably a group N
+R
143, P
+R
153 or S
+R
152 in which the groups R
14 are the same or different and are each hydrogen, C
1-4-alkyl or aryl (preferably phenyl) or two of the groups R
14 together with the heteroatom to which they are attached from a saturated or unsaturated
heterocyclic ring containing from 5 to 7 atoms the groups R
15 are each OR
14 or R
14. Preferably the cationic group is permanently cationic, that is each R
14 is other than hydrogen. Preferably a cationic group Q is N
+R
143 in which each R
14 is C
1-4-alkyl, preferably methyl.
[0080] A zwitterionic group Q
1 may have an overall charge, for instance by having a divalent centre of anionic charge
and monovalent centre of cationic charge or vice-versa or by having two centres of
cationic charge and one centre of anionic charge or vice-versa. Preferably, however,
the zwitterion has no overall charge and most preferably has a centre of monovalent
cationic charge and a centre of monovalent anionic charge.
[0081] Examples of zwitterionic groups which may be used as Q
1 in the present invention are disclosed in
WO-A-0029481.
[0082] Where the ethylenically unsaturated monomer includes zwitterionic monomer, for instance,
this may increase the hydrophilicity, lubricity, biocompatibility and/or haemocompatibility
of the particles. Suitable zwitterionic monomers are described in our earlier publications
WO-A-9207885,
WO-A-9416748,
WO-A-9416749 and
WO-A-9520407. Preferably a zwitterionic monomer is 2-methacryloyloxy-2'-trimethylammonium ethyl
phosphate inner salt (MPC).
[0083] In the monomer of general formula I preferably Y
1 is a group CH
2=CR
10COA- in which R
10 is H or methyl, preferably methyl, and in which A
1 is preferably NH. B is preferably an alkanediyl group of 1 to 12, preferably 2 to
6 carbon atoms. Such monomers are acrylic monomers.
[0084] There may be included in the ethylenically unsaturated monomer diluent monomer, for
instance non-ionic monomer. Such a monomer may be useful to control the pK
a of the acid groups, to control the hydrophilicity or hydrophobicity of the product,
to provide hydrophobic regions in the polymer, or merely to act as inert diluent.
Examples of non-ionic diluent monomer are, for instance, alkyl (alk) acrylates and
(alk) acrylamides, especially such compounds having alkyl groups with 1 to 12 carbon
atoms, hydroxy, and di-hydroxy-substituted alkyl(alk) acrylates and -(alk) acrylamides,
vinyl lactams, styrene and other aromatic monomers.
[0085] In the polymer matrix, the level of anion is preferably in the range 0.1 to 10 meq
g
-1, preferably at least 1.0 meq g
-1. Preferred anions are derived from strong acids, such as sulphates, sulphonates,
phosphates and phosphonates.
[0086] Where PVA macromer is copolymerised with other ethylenically unsaturated monomers,
the weight ratio of PVA macromer to other monomer is preferably in the range of 50:1
to 1:5, more preferably in the range 20:1 to 1:2. In the ethylenically unsaturated
monomer the anionic monomer is preferably present in an amount in the range 10 to
100 mole%, preferably at least 25 mole%.
[0087] The crosslinked polymer is formed as such in microsphere form, for instance by polymerising
in droplets of monomer in a dispersed phase in a continuous immiscible carrier. Examples
of suitable water-in-oil polymerisations to produce particles having the desired size,
when swollen, are known. For instance
US 4,224,427 describes processes for forming uniform spherical beads (microspheres) of up to 5
mm in diameter, by dispersing water-soluble monomers into a continuous solvent phase,
in a presence of suspending agents. Stabilisers and surfactants may be present to
provide control over the size of the dispersed phase particles. After polymerisation,
the crosslinked microspheres are recovered by known means, and washed and optionally
sterilised. Preferably the particles e.g. microspheres, are swollen in an aqueous
liquid, and classified according to their size.
[0088] Methods for loading the two actives into a microsphere are selected according to
the nature of the actives and the loading levels required.. Where they are loaded
simultaneously, this is suitable from a solution containing both the actives in combination
with one another. Sequential loading methods may involve contact of one of the actives
in an aqueous solution with polymer at a level or for a time such that ion-exchange
within the polymer matrix takes place to an extent such that a proportion of the anionic
groups of the polymer remain unassociated with cationic active. In a second step,
optionally after removal of non-absorbed first active, a solution of the second active,
usually in water, is contacted with the partially loaded microspheres for a period
of time allowing ion-exchange to take place and the second drug to become loaded into
the polymer.
[0089] Where one of the actives is a compound having low water-solubility, a different technique
is used. For instance it may be possible to load the actives sequentially, for instance
by contacting the microspheres with solutions of each drug in suitable solvents, enabling
the microspheres to swell and absorb the active into the polymer matrix. In one embodiment,
a low water-solubility active is loaded into the polymer first. In another embodiment,
the cationically charged active is loaded first.
[0090] It may be possible to select a solvent or solvent system in which both a cationically
charged active and a neutral active, which has low water-solubility, are soluble,
the solvent being one which acts to swell the polymer. For instance, where the actives
are both soluble in selected alcohol, the alcohol may be used to dissolve the actives
together, and to swell the polymer matrix which is swellable in the selected alcohol.
[0091] Preferably the loading process involves the steps:
contacting microspheres which comprise a matrix of a water-insoluble water-swellable
anionically charged crosslinked polymer in substantially dry form with a solution
of a drug having a water-solubility less than 10 g/l at room temperature in a first
organic solvent, whereby a solution of drug in solvent becomes impregnated into the
microspheres;
separating drug solution which has not impregnated the microspheres;
contacting the impregnated microspheres with aqueous liquid whereby drug is precipitated
in the core of the microspheres;
contacting the microspheres containing precipitated drug with an aqueous solution
of an ionic drug having a charge opposite to that of the polymer to allow loading
of ion-exchange; and
recovering the dual loaded microspheres, wherein the drugs are selected as described
above.
[0092] In this method, we have found that we can achieve high levels of loading for both
the water-insoluble drug and the cationic drug. The level of loading of cationic drug
is as high as for the neat microspheres. Where the loading method is carried out with
the ionic drug being loaded first and the neutral water-insoluble drug being loaded
second, the possible loading levels achieved for the second, neutral drug are lower
than for neat microspheres. This effect is further shown in Example 4 below.
[0093] We believe it is the first time that a water-swellable ionically charged drug delivery
polymer has been loaded with a combination of a water-insoluble drug and a drug having
an opposite charge to the polymer. According to a further aspect (referred to hereinafter
as the second aspect) of the invention a drug delivery matrix which comprises a water-insoluble,
water-swellable ionically charged polymer which is swellable in water at room temperature
to an equilibrium water content in the range 40 to 99% by weight based on polymer
plus water is contacted with a solution of drug having a water-solubility less than
10 g/l at room temperature in an organic solvent which is capable of swelling the
polymer, whereby the solution becomes impregnated into the matrix;
any drug solution which has not impregnated the polymer matrix is separated;
the impregnated matrix is contacted with water whereby drug is precipitated in the
matrix;
the matrix having precipitated water-insoluble drug is contacted with an aqueous solution
of the ionically charged drug whereby the matrix swells and ion-exchange with counterions
associated with the polymer takes place and drug is electrostatically bound in the
polymer matrix.
[0094] Optionally the matrix loaded with the low solubility drug is subsequently rinsed
and/or dried. The subsequent steps up to contact with the aqueous solution of the
ionically charged drug may be as described in
WO2007090897 and the preferred components and conditions described in that specification may be
used for the first steps in the process of this embodiment, including the drugs. The
matrix may be in the form of a microsphere according to the first aspect of the invention.
Alternatively it may be a drug delivery device article such as an implant in the form
of a needle, slab, disc, thread or film of polymer. Alternatively it is a coating
on a device which is implanted such as a stent, catheter, needle, tubing, graft, valve,
wire, etc.
[0095] The polymer may be an anionic polymer as used in the first aspect of the invention
described above. Alternatively it may be a cationic polymer, for instance also having
zwitterionic pendant groups, as described in
WO0152915. Alternatively it may be another ionic hydrogel polymer used in drug delivery device
such as a dextran sulphate-based material as described in Liu
et al., (2003)
op. cit..
[0096] Preferably it is synthetic, although it may alternatively be a natural-based polymer,
based on a protein or a polysaccharide, such as collagen, hyaluronic acid, dextran
sulphate, alginate, a cellulosic polymer or albumin.
[0097] In the method of the second aspect of the invention the matrix loaded with the first
drug may be dried before contact with the aqueous solution of the second drug. After
ion-exchange with the second drug excess drug solution may be removed before rinsing.
This aspect of the invention is of particular value where the water-insoluble drug
is rapamycin or an analogue as described above, or a taxane such as paclitaxel, or
dexamethasone.
[0098] In an alternative embodiment of loading method to produce the product of the first
aspect of the invention, the active which is not charged may be a material which is
crystalline at room temperature, but for which it would be desirable to avoid being
in crystalline form. Such drugs include, for instance, ibuprofen. For these drugs,
crystallisation of the drug may be inhibited by incorporating a crystallisation inhibitor,
such as an oil, for instance a mineral oil or a vegetable oil, optionally an oil which
acts as an imaging agent, for instance lipiodol or another iodinated oil. Suitably
the process involves contacting microspheres comprising a matrix of a water-insoluble
water-swellable ionically charged crosslinked polymer with a solution of the crystallisable
drug in an organic solvent capable of penetrating the microspheres, the solution further
containing a crystal modifier which inhibits crystallisation of the drug, and, in
a subsequent step, contacting the microspheres loaded with crystallisable drug with
an aqueous solution of an ionic drug with a charge opposite that of the polymer matrix
in an amount and for a time suitable for loading the drug by ion-exchange. Preferably
in the method, following loading of the crystallisable drug, the beads are washed
with water or an aqueous solution to remove non-absorbed crystallisable drug.
[0099] In the invention of the first or second aspects of the invention, the microspheres
may be suitable for administration in an embolisation method. The microspheres are
therefore of a size which renders them suitable for use in embolisation, depending
on the animal being treated, and the location of the tumour, and thus the size of
the feeding blood vessels. For instance embolic microspheres preferably have a size
when swollen in deionised water at room temperature (neat) of 40 µm up to 1500 µm,
preferably in the range 100 µm up to 1200 µm. Alternatively the microspheres may be
suitable for administration as a drug depot, for instance which may release drug over
a long period into the surrounding tissue, and optionally into the circulation. In
another embodiment, the microspheres are suitable for intratumoural injection. Microspheres
having sizes in the range mentioned above for embolisation may also be suitable for
intratumoural administration or for administration in the resection margins following
tumour resection.
[0100] Methods for loading cationically charged and water-insoluble actives into anionic
matrix polymers as described above for use with microspheres, may also be applicable
for loading such drug types into other hydrogel based drug delivery articles. In the
second aspect of the invention the two drugs are preferably selected so as to be therapeutically
effective in tumour treatment, and preferably have a combination index as hereinbefore
defined of less than 0.9, preferably less than 0.7, for instance less than 0.5, preferably
less than 0.3, and most preferably less than 0.1.
[0101] The ionic drug in the second aspect of the invention may be a cationic anthracycline
as described in
WO04071495, or a camptothecin derivative such as described in
WO2006027567. Alternatively the drug may be anionic such as described in
WO0152915.
[0102] The present invention is illustrated in the accompanying examples. The examples refer
to various figures which relate briefly to the following results:
Figure 1 shows the loading profile of beads loaded with doxorubicin (Sample 1) or
irinotecan (Sample 2) at a level of 25 mg.ml-1 of beads after loading with the second drug at a saturation level, n=1, as described
in Example 2;
Figure 2 shows the loading profile of irinotecan and doxorubicin combined into beads.
Loading profile of beads loaded with 25 mg of irinotecan for 1 h and then with 25
mg of doxorubicin (Sample 3), or with 25 mg of doxorubicin for 1 h and then with 25
mg of irinotecan (Sample 4) and loading profile of beads loaded with a mixture of
25 mg of doxorubicin and 25 mg of irinotecan (Sample 5), n=1, as described in Example
2;
Figure 3 shows the size of samples loaded with a combination of doxorubicin and irinotecan
by different methods, n=1, as described in Example 2;
Figure 4 shows the elution profile of doxorubicin and irinotecan eluted into PBS at
RT from the same beads. Sample 1 is beads loaded with doxorubicin at a level of 25
mg.ml-1 of beads after loading with irinotecan at a saturation level, Sample 2 is beads loaded
with irinotecan at a level of 25 mg ml-1 of beads after loading with doxorubicin at a saturation level. Sample 3 is beads
loaded with 25 mg of irinotecan for 1 h and then with 25 mg of doxorubicin, Sample
4 is beads loaded with 25 mg of doxorubicin for 1 h and then with 25 mg of irinotecan
and Sample 5 is beads loaded with a mixture of 25 mg of doxorubicin and 25 mg of irinotecan,
n=1, as described in Example 2;
Figure 5 shows the release profile of microspheres loaded with doxorubicin and ibuprofen
into 200 ml of PBS at RT onto a roller-mixer for 24 h, n=1, as described in Example
3;
Figure 6 is a flow diagram showing two methods of rapamycin and doxorubicin loading
into beads, as described in Example 4;
Figure 7 shows the size distribution of Unloaded and drug-loaded Beads, as described
in Example 4;
Figures 8A-D show doxorubicin and rapamycin elution from loaded beads to 200 mL PBS,
25 °C. (A) Drug elution from the beads made by Method 1. (B) Elution data of (A) presented
as percentage. (C) Drug elution from the beads made by Method 2. (D) Elution data
of (C) presented as percentage. In (A) and (C), the amount of drug eluted were corrected
to per volume of beads without drug, as described in Example 4;
Figure 9 shows the procedure of ibuprofen-irinotecan bead preparation, as described
in Example 5;
Figure 10 shows the size distribution of ibuprofen- and ibuprofen-irinotecan-loaded
beads, as described in Example 5;
Figure 11 shows the elution of irinotecan from beads with the combination of ibuprofen
and irinotecan. Elution condition: 0.24 ml beads (loaded), 200 mL PBS, 25 °C, as described
in Example 5;
Figure 12 shows ibuprofen elution from beads with the combination of ibuprofen and
irinotecan. Elution condition: 0.24 mL beads (loaded), 200 ml PBS, 25 °C, as described
in Example 5;
Figure 13 shows doxorubicin elution from Beads vs. elution time. (Error bars: 1SD,
n=6), as described in Example 6;
Figure 14 shows the viable HepG2 cells percentage as compared to untreated cells with
respect to exposure time and bead number from LDH assay. (Error bars: 1SD, n=6), as
described in Example 6;
Figure 15 shows the percentage of viable HepG2 cells for rapamycin, doxorubicin and
combination (Error bars: 1SD, n=5), results from LDH assay, as described in Example
7;
Figure 16 shows the percentage of viable HepG2 cells for rapamycin, doxorubicin and
combination - scale expansion (Error bars: 1SD, n=5), results from LDH assay, as described
in Example 7;
Figure 17 shows the percentage of viable HepG2 cells for rapamycin, doxorubicin and
combination (Error bars: 1SEM, n=3), results from MTS assay, as described in Example
7;
Figure 18 shows the percentage of viable HepG2 cells for rapamycin, doxorubicin and
combination- scale expansion (Error bars: 1SEM, n=3) Results from MTS assay, as described
in Example 7;
Figure 19 shows cell viability % (log scale) of HepG2 cells after 72hrs exposure to
drug loaded microsphere combinations (MTS assay, n=6, ±SD), as described in Example
8;
Figures 20 to 22 shows the percentage of viable PSN1 cells after 24, 48 and 72 hours
(respectively) exposure to mono and dual loaded drug eluting beads (n=7 +/-SD) as
described in Example 9;
Figures 23 to 25 show the percentage of viable HepG2 cells after 24, 48 and 72 hours
(respectively) exposure to mono and dual loaded drug eluting beads (n=4 +/-SD) as
described in Example 9; and
Figures 26 to 28 show the percentage of viable HepG2 cells after 24, 48 and 72 hours
(respectively) exposure to mono and dual loaded drug eluting beads (n=4 +/-SD) as
described in Example 10.
Example 1: Preparation of Drug Eluting Beads
[0103] Microspheres are synthesised as described in Reference Example of
WO2006027567 to produce low AMPS and high AMPS formulations.
Example 2: Loading and Elution of Irinotecan and Doxorubicin Combinations
[0104] Five samples of 500-700 µm High AMPS beads of Example 1 were loaded with doxorubicin
and irinotecan following different approaches:
Sample 1: 3.5 mL of irinotecan solution (Campto, Pfizer, 20 mg.mL-1= 70 mg) was loaded into 1 mL of beads for 48 h, to saturate all the sulfonate groups.
Then, the depleted solution was removed and the loaded beads were washed with a known
volume of deionised water to remove the non-bound drug. The amount of irinotecan loaded
into the beads was calculated by depletion, as a difference between the initial and
final amounts in the depleted solution and all washings measured by UV at a wavelength
of 369 nm. One mL of doxorubicin (Dabur oncology-25 mg.ml-1) was later added to the same beads and the loading profile determined.
Sample 2: Similar to sample 1, but 2.8 mL of doxorubicin (25 mg.ml-1 = 70 mg) solution was added to the beads instead of the irinotecan solution in the
first step, to saturate all the sulfonate groups. All solutions were measured by UV
at a wavelength of 483 nm wavelength and the amount of drug loaded into the beads
determined by depletion. After the beads were loaded and washed with deionised water,
in a second step, 1.25 ml of irinotecan solution (20 mg.mL-1 = 25 mg) was added to the same beads and the loading profile determined.
Sample 3: 1.25 mL of irinotecan solution (20 mg.ml-1 = 25mg) was loaded into 1 ml of beads and after 1 h, 1 ml of doxorubicin (25 mg.ml-1) was added to the same beads. No intermediate washes were performed in this or the
following samples.
Sample 4: 1 ml of doxorubicin (25 mg.ml-1) was loaded into 1 ml of beads and after 1 h 1.25 mL of irinotecan solution (20 mg.ml-1 = 25mg) was added to the same beads.
Sample 5: 1.25 ml of irinotecan solution (20 mg.ml-1 = 25mg) was mixed with 1 ml of doxorubicin (25 mg.ml-1) and then added to 1 ml of beads.
[0105] To determine the loading profiles of all samples, an aliquot of 50 µl was removed
from each vial at time 5, 15, 30, 45 min after the addition of each drug, diluted
as necessary and read by UV at 483 and 369 nm. The amount loaded at each time point
was determined by depletion using the corresponding standard curves.
[0106] After loading with both drugs, all samples were sized in their loading solutions
using the Colorview III camcorder and pictures were taken. For that, at least 100
beads were measured. These data were normalised and the corresponding histograms generated.
[0107] After being sized, all samples were eluted. Here, the remaining loading solutions
were removed using a Pasteur pipette and the loaded beads were transferred to brown
flasks containing 200 ml of PBS (Inverclyde Biologicals). At time 5, 15, 30, 45, 60,
90 min, 2 h, 4 h and 24 h, an aliquot of elution medium (4 ml) was removed and replaced
with 4 mL of fresh PBS to maintain the volume. All samples were read by UV at 483
and 369 nm wavelengths, using the corresponding standard curves to calculate the amount
eluted at each time point.
Calculations:
[0108] To calculate the loading and elution of both drugs from the same beads the following
assumptions were made:
Absorbance at 483 nm = Absorbance of doxorubicin at 483 nm.
[0109] It is observed in the UV scan of irinotecan solution that this drug does not absorb
at this wavelength.

[0110] The doxorubicin scan showed some absorbance at 369 nm wavelength and it is considered
here that there is not interaction between the absorbance of doxorubicin and irinotecan
when measured at the same time. The scan from the mixture does not show any notable
interaction between the absorbance spectra of both drugs.
[0111] These two assumptions were made for all calculations. All samples were read at both
483 nm and 369 nm wavelengths. Using the absorbance and the standard curve of doxorubicin
at 483 nm, the concentration of doxorubicin in each sample was calculated and using
these concentrations and the standard curve of doxorubicin at 369 nm, the absorbance
of doxorubicin at this wavelength was calculated. Then, subtracting this value from
the total absorbance at 369 nm, the absorbance at 369 nm and hence the concentration
of irinotecan was calculated.
Loading of Irinotecan and Doxorubicin into the same Beads
[0112] The objective of these experiments was to assess and compare the loading and elution
behaviour of different combinations of doxorubicin and irinotecan in order to determine
their mechanism of interaction with the beads and evaluate possible interactions between
drugs. If both drugs could be successfully incorporated in the same beads it would
be simple to achieve the local delivery of both antitumour drugs simultaneously if
required.
[0113] Doxorubicin and irinotecan were loaded following the different approaches detailed
above and results are presented as follows:
As seen in Figure 1, if irinotecan is loaded at maximum bound capacity first and then
doxorubicin is added to the system (Sample 1), some irinotecan (∼ 17%) is displaced,
but the majority of drug is retained by the beads. If doxorubicin is loaded at maximum
bound capacity first and then irinotecan is added to the system (Sample 2), a smaller
percentage of doxorubicin (< 8%) is displaced by the irinotecan. These data agree
with the fact that the K
b values for doxorubicin are slightly higher than those calculated for irinotecan (Gonzalez
et al 2006) and doxorubicin releases much slower and to a lower extent than irinotecan
in the same volume of solution. In both cases, however, the amount of drug displaced
is small, indicating both interactions are stable after addition of the second drug.
This could be explained as a consequence of the small volumes of solution used, easily
saturated, in the loading process and the initially-bound bulky drug molecule sterically
hindering the approach of the second drug to the binding sites, a phenomenon that
would not be experienced by small ions, such as Na
+ or K
+. These two factors will contribute to the small percentage of drug displaced by the
second drug added.
[0114] Sample 3 and 4 in Figure 2 show that if the beads are first loaded with 25 mg of
one drug and then 25 mg of the other drug is added, very little of the bound drug
(< 5%) is displaced on addition of the second drug, independent of the order. These
results are expected, as the maximum loading capacity of the beads is ∼ 40 mg and
52 mg for doxorubicin and irinotecan respectively and the binding sites of the beads
are not saturated when the second drug is added (initially, 25 mg of drug are added
to the beads and then 25 mg of the other drug is added).
[0115] Sample 5 on Figure 2 shows that if both drugs are loaded at the same time, the loading
rate and the total amount loaded is slightly higher for doxorubicin than for irinotecan
(94% of the total doxorubicin added (25 mg) is loaded whereas 91% of the total irinotecan
added (25 mg) is loaded after 2 h). This small difference could be explained as a
result of their K
b values, where doxorubicin K
b value (5.58*10
8-1.02*10
9) is slightly higher than for irinotecan (8.73*10
7-3.62*10
8).
Sizing of Irinotecan and Doxorubicin Loaded into the Same Beads
[0116] No notable differences were detected between beads loaded with both drugs by the
different approaches (Figure 3).
Elution of Irinotecan and Doxorubicin Loaded into the Same Beads
[0117] Figure 4 shows that all samples follow similar elution trends and doxorubicin is
released very slowly (< 25% in 24 h) compared to irinotecan (> 99% mg in < 4 h) when
eluted into 200 ml of PBS.
[0118] In samples 1 and 2, where one drug was loaded up to saturation level before the other
drug was added, the second drug to be loaded was released faster than in sample 3
and 4, where both drugs were loaded into the beads at the same time below saturation
level. This could be explained by the partially bound nature of the second drug to
be loaded, caused by all the sulfonate groups being saturated (sample 1 and 2). A
small amount of the drug loaded second would be bound to the beads by displacing the
first, mostly bound drug. Most of the loaded drug would be free (unbound) inside the
beads and would elute faster than the bound drug.
[0119] In conclusion, when doxorubicin and irinotecan are loaded at the same time or consecutively
into the beads, no change in the release behaviour of the other drug is observed.
The presence of an additional drug does not interfere the loading or modify the release
behaviour of the other drug. Each drug elutes as expected from the individual drug
elution profiles, generated for each drug alone.
[0120] UV profiles of the eluted solutions were performed and compared to an unloaded mixture
of doxorubicin and irinotecan. The shape of the peaks and the maximum values did not
change, confirming that no apparent interaction or modification of either drug occurs
inside the beads.
[0121] These experiments demonstrate that is possible load and elute both drugs at the same
time from the same beads. Sustained release of the two drugs is expected from this
product. The combination of these two anti-tumoural drugs is expected to achieve higher
therapeutic effect than the treatment with a high-dose single drug and to decrease
the adverse effects of both drugs. This potential product will be evaluated in vivo
to determine their effect as synergistic, additive or antagonistic. This effect will
depend on the molecular ratios of individual chemotherapy agents and schedules of
administration (Aschele et al. 1998). In vivo studies will be carried out to evaluate
different doses of the two agents in order to determine the best ratio. These experiments
revealed that both drugs could be successfully loaded and eluted within the same beads
without alter the release profiles of the drugs individually and suggest the possibility
of loading more than one cationic drug in the beads.
Example 3: Combination of Ibuprofen and Doxorubicin in the Same Beads
[0122] Ibuprofen and doxorubicin solutions were loaded into low AMPS beads simultaneously.
In order to achieve this, one sample of 1 ml of 500-700 µm beads was loaded with ibuprofen
(according to examples in
WO2004073688). The excess packaging solution was removed using a Pasteur pipette and 2 ml of doxorubicin
solution (5 mg.ml
-1) were added. After 24 h, a 50 µl aliquot was removed from the depleted solution and
measured by UV at 263 nm and 483 nm. The amount of doxorubicin loaded into beads was
calculated by depletion, as a difference between the initial and final amounts in
the depleted solution (calculations explained below).
[0123] After loading with both drugs, the depleted loading solution was removed and the
loaded beads were transferred to brown flasks containing 200 mL of PBS. At time 5,
45, 90 min, 3, 5 and 24 h, 2 ml of elution medium was removed and replaced with 2
ml of fresh PBS to maintain the volume. All samples were read by UV at 263 and 483
nm and the amount of each drug eluted at each time point was calculated using the
corresponding standard curves.
Calculations:
[0124] To calculate the loading and elution of both drugs from the same beads the following
assumptions were made:
Absorbance at 483 nm = Absorbance of doxorubicin at 483 nm.
[0125] The UV scans of ibuprofen and doxorubicin solution showed that only doxorubicin absorbs
at this wavelength.

[0126] The doxorubicin UV scan showed some absorbance at 263 nm wavelength. The assumption
is made that there is no interaction between the absorbance of doxorubicin and ibuprofen
when measured at the same time.
[0127] These two assumptions were made for all calculations. All samples were read at both
wavelengths (263 nm and 483 nm). Using the absorbance at 483 nm the concentration
of doxorubicin in each sample was calculated, then using these concentrations and
the standard curve of doxorubicin at 263 nm, the absorbance of doxorubicin at 263
nm was calculated. By subtracting this value from the total absorbance at 263 nm,
the concentration of ibuprofen, was calculated using the ibuprofen standard curve.
Loading and Release of Doxorubicin and Ibuprofen Combinations in Beads
[0128] In the first set of experiments, doxorubicin and ibuprofen were combined into the
same beads and their release behaviour was evaluated.
[0129] Initially, lyophilised beads as described in
WO2004073688 were loaded with ibuprofen /ethanol solution by solvent evaporation and then rehydrated
with water and autoclaved for 15 min at 121°C. The rehydrated ibuprofen loaded beads
were then loaded with doxorubicin by immersion into doxorubicin solution (5 mg.ml
-1) for 24 h. In this experiment, a maximum amount of 8.3 mg of doxorubicin was loaded
into the beads calculated by depletion of the concentration of the loading solution.
The low AMPS beads have a maximum capacity for doxorubicin of ~14 mg.ml
-1 when loaded with this drug alone. This maximum amount is limited by the number of
binding sites available in the beads. If a greater amount of drug were to be added
to the sample, it would not be loaded as all the sulfonate groups within the beads
would have been saturated.
[0130] The release of both drugs from the same beads was monitored by UV spectrophotometry
at the same time, the elution profile for both drugs released is presented in Figure
5. Both drugs had similar release profiles to those exhibited for beads loaded with
only one of the drugs and no interaction was observed between the two drugs. This
experiment showed that both drugs can be loaded and released into the same bead, offering
a platform for sustained released of two drugs simultaneously. This could be beneficial
as a drug delivery device by adding the therapeutic effects of both drugs by administration
of one product. This therapy could reduce the requirements of analgesic drugs following
the procedures, and the dose of the more toxic drug if synergistic antitumoral results
by the combination of both drugs are demonstrated.
Example 4: Combination of Doxorubicin and Rapamycin in the Same Beads
[0131] Loading methods: Two loading methods were tested as shown in Figure 6).
Method 1
[0132] Unloaded high AMPS bead slurry 1 ml was loaded with doxorubicin solution (5 ml of
10.07 mg/ml, target loading 50 mg/ml Bead) overnight. The doxorubicin-loaded beads
were washed with 1 ml DMSO 5 times to remove extra water, and 1 ml 60 mg/mL rapamycin
DMSO solution was mixed with the doxorubicin beads for about 30 min. Subsequently,
following removal of extra rapamycin DMSO solution, the beads were washed with 5 ml
saline until no white drug particles were observed.
Method 2
[0133] 1 ml Bead slurry was washed with 1 mL DMSO 5 times and mixed with 1 ml 60 mg/ml rapamycin
DMSO solution for 30 min. The loaded beads were then washed with 5 ml saline until
no further white drug particles were observed. 0.5 ml of rapamycin-loaded bead slurry
was roller-mixed with 2.5 ml 10.07 mg/ml doxorubicin solution overnight, target doxorubicin
loading is 50 mg/ml.
Doxorubicin loading test: The doxorubicin loading was measured by depletion method in either water or DMSO
solution. The loading solution was taken and diluted 10 times and measured by UV at
483 nm to determine the concentration of doxorubicin residue in solution.
Rapamycin loading test: For the beads with rapamycin alone, 0.5 ml rapamycin-loaded beads (from 1
st step, Method 1) were extracted by 1 ml DMSO 5 times, and the solution were accumulated
in a 10 ml volumetric flask. The concentration of rapamycin was determined by UV at
279 nm.
[0134] For the beads with doxorubicin and rapamycin combination, 0.26 ml of drug-loaded
beads (from 2
nd step, Method 2) were extracted with 1 ml DMSO 4 times, and the extraction was collected
in a 5 ml volumetric flask and DMSO was added to top the solution to the mark. The
concentration of rapamycin was determined by subtraction of the absorbance of doxorubicin
at 279 nm from the total absorbance at 279 nm, in which the doxorubicin absorbance
at 279 nm was calculated from that at 483 nm according to the scan of concentration-known
solutions.
Doxorubicin loss determination: The doxorubicin loss during DMSO washing of loaded beads before further loading of
rapamycin (Method 2) was determined by measuring the accumulated DMSO washing solution
in a volumetric flask at 483 nm.
Elution of drug-loaded beads: The elution of drug-loaded beads were carried out by mixing the beads with 200 ml
PBS (Inverclyde, Bellshill, UK) and roller-mixed on a roller mixer. At certain time
point, the solution (100 ml or 150 ml) was taken out for concentration determination
by UV and same volume of fresh PBS was added to keep a sink condition. The determination
rapamycin concentration followed the same principle as that in the section of Rapamycin
Loading Test.
Image analysis and sizing: The loaded beads were placed under an Olympus microscope, about 200 beads were counted
for size distribution study by software (AnalySIS 5.0 Soft Image System GmbH), and
photos were taken under different light/contrast background for morphology study.
Rapamycin and doxorubicin standard curve: The maximum absorbance of rapamycin is at wavelength 279 nm, which is overlapped
with doxorubicin absorbance. At 483 nm, the wavelength of maximum absorbance of doxorubicin,
rapamycin has no absorption. Therefore, the rapamycin concentration in a bicomponent
system (doxorubicin and rapamycin) could be determined by first measurement of standard
solutions of doxorubicin at both wavelength, then subtraction of the absorbance of
doxorubicin from the absorbance of mixture. Standard curves are created of doxorubicin
at 279 and 483 nm in water and DMSO.
The concentration of rapamycin after subtraction of doxorubicin absorbance can be
determined by the relationship given underneath at 279 nm:

Comparison of drug loading in the two loading procedures
[0135] In the 1
st step of Method 1, rapamycin was loaded at 28.48 mg/ml, the loading efficiency was
about 47.5% (Table 1). Compared to the rapamycin loading in the 2
nd step of Method 2, 37.22 mg/ml rapamycin was loaded, the loading efficiency being
62.0%. This significantly high loading efficiency was consistent with the observation
that the doxorubicin-loaded beads swelled larger and most of the rapamycin loading
solution was sucked into the beads. From a mechanism point of view, the doxorubicin-loaded
beads have smaller size, and tend to swell larger in polar solvents like water and
DMSO due to the reduced salt effect which was observed in doxorubicin loading solution
or saline.
[0136] For the beads loaded with rapamycin (28.48 mg/ml), the doxorubicin loading capability
was found to be 46.02 mg/ml, similar to that of beads without rapamycin. During doxorubicin
loading, no rapamycin leakage was observed. This experiment suggests that rapamycin
preloading does not affect the later doxorubicin loading, which means that the two
drugs occupy different sites within the beads. Doxorubicin molecules tend to bind
to the site of the sulfonate groups by ionic interaction; however, rapamycin stays
within the interstitial space within the hydrogel by expelling water out and forming
small drug crystals.
Table 1. Rapamycin and doxorubicin loading by two methods
a
| Sample list |
Doxorubicin loading (mg/ml b) |
Rapamycin loading (mg/ml b) |
| Rapamycin loading in 1st step, Method 1 |
- |
28.48 |
| Doxorubicin loading in 1st step, Method 2 |
45.88 |
- |
| Doxorubicin loading in 2nd step, Method 1 |
46.02 |
28.48 c |
| Rapamycin loading in 2nd step, Method 2 |
39.17 d |
37.22 |
a The data shown in the table are average values of two replicates.
b All the drug loading data were normalised to the volume of beads without drug loading.
c No rapamycin loss was observed during doxorubicin loading, therefore the same data
as that in 1st step was used.
d The doxorubicin loss during DMSO washing in preloading of rapamycin was 6.71 mg/ml.
The further doxorubicin loss during rapamycin loading was ignored. |
[0137] In the Method 2, the washing of doxorubicin-loaded beads with DMSO before rapamycin
loading caused doxorubicin loss of about 6.71 mg/ml, although this method had a higher
rapamycin loading. The final doxorubicin to rapamycin ratio was 1.62 for beads from
Method 1, and 1.05 for beads from Method 2.
[0138] From an operational point of view, Method 1 is a relatively clean procedure and only
produces rapamycin waste solution. Method 2 produces both doxorubicin-DMSO and rapamycin
waste solution. Doxorubicin loading in Method 1 is almost completed, and Method 1
is also relatively easier to process. In spite of high loading of rapamycin in Method
2, Method 1 is recommended.
Image analysis and size distribution of drug-loaded beads
[0139] Photographs are taken after rapamycin and rapamycin-doxorubicin loading by Method
1. It appears that these beads retain their smooth surface and spherical shape well
after drug loading. Some small particles of rapamycin were observed, which are the
residues from the 1
st step. The doxorubicin-loaded beads experienced a slight lost of their spherical shape.
After additional loading with rapamycin, the shape recovered well and their surfaces
were smooth. If compared to the final beads from Method 1, the beads from Method 2
have shallow red colour, which may be due to doxorubicin loss after DMSO washing,
or due to later loaded rapamycin coverage.
[0140] The size characterisation of DC Bead and drug-loaded beads were listed in Table 2,
and the size distribution was shown in Figure 7. From Table 2, the rapamycin-loaded
beads in Method 1 have a slight increased sizes compared to unloaded beads. Once loaded
with doxorubicin, the mean size decreased by about 100 µm. In Method 2, the doxorubicin-loaded
beads show the smallest mean size. After loading with rapamycin, the size increased
to about 479 µm, close to the final bead size from Method 1. Meanwhile, the standard
deviation data in Table 2 indicate that the range of size distribution has almost
no change during drug loading. Therefore, the two methods give final beads having
almost the same size range (Figure 7).
Table 2. Size characterisation of Unloaded and drug-loaded beads
| Sample list |
Maximum size (µm) |
Minimum size (µm) |
Mean size (µm) |
Standard deviation (µm) |
| Unloaded Beads |
645 |
451 |
546 |
46 |
| After rapamycin loading in 1st step, Method 1 |
662 |
471 |
560 |
48 |
| After doxorubicin loading in 1st step, Method 2 |
518 |
365 |
444 |
39 |
| After doxorubicin loading in 2nd step, Method 1 |
532 |
360 |
466 |
36 |
| After rapamycin loading in 2nd step, Method 2 |
562 |
402 |
479 |
40 |
Drug elution from loaded beads
[0141] Figure 8 shows the elution data of doxorubicin and rapamycin from loaded beads into
PBS. In this experiment, the elution medium was refreshed after a certain time to
mimic sink conditions. From Figure 8 (B) and (D), the drug elution profiles from the
beads made by the different methods are very similar: rapamycin released about 33%
after 30 hr elution, and doxorubicin released about 41 to 46%.
[0142] Comparing Figure 8 (A) and (C), the doxorubicin from beads made by Method 1 eluted
slightly faster than the beads made by Method 2. For rapamycin elution, the reverse
phenomenon was observed. This may be due to the later loaded drug covered or blocked
the pathway of the first drug, which was also used for the first drug elution.
Example 5: Combination of Irinotecan and Ibuprofen in the Same Bead
[0143] Drug loading: The drug loading procedure is shown in Figure 9, in which the unloaded high AMPS
beads were washed with DMSO to remove the water trapped within the hydrogel. A mixture
of ibuprofen solubilised in DMSO and castor oil as crystallisation inhibitor were
subsequently mixed with the bead slurry, and kept for about 10 minutes. Following
the removal of the loading solution, saline was used to wash the loaded beads until
no drug particles nor large oil droplets were observed. The irinotecan loading was
achieved by simply mixing the ibuprofen-loaded beads with irinotecan solution (10
mg/mL) by roller-mixing overnight. The final loaded beads were kept in the water solution
as product.
[0144] The sample matrix of ibuprofen-irinotecan beads was listed in Table 3.
Table 3. Sample matrix of ibuprofen-irinotecan loading
| Sample |
Composition of ibuprofen loading solution |
Irinotecan loading solution (10.07 mg/mL) |
| Ibuprofen (g) |
DMSO (ml) |
Castor oil (g) |
Volume of Irinotecan solution (ml) |
| Ex 5-1 |
0.8 |
5 |
5 |
4 |
| Ex 5-2 |
0.4 |
5 |
5 |
4 |
| Ex 5-3 |
0.2 |
5 |
5 |
4 |
| Ex 5-4 |
0.8 |
2.5 |
7.5 |
4 |
Determination of drug content in beads:
[0145]
- 1). Ibuprofen. The content of loaded ibuprofen was determined by an HPLC method. The
slurry of drug-loaded beads with known volume was extracted with DMSO (1 ml) for five
to six times. The collected DMSO solution was topped to the mark in a 10 ml volumetric
flask, and the concentration of ibuprofen was measured by HPLC.
- 2). Irinotecan. The content of irinotecan in loaded beads was measured by depletion
method. 1 - 1.1 ml of ibuprofen-loaded beads were roller-mixed overnight with 4 mL
10 mg/ml irinotecan solution to target the loading at 40 mg/ml beads. The loading
solution was diluted with water and measured by UV at 369 nm. Compared to the standard
curve, the concentration of irinotecan left in loading solution can be calculated.
Elution of drug-loaded beads:
[0146] The elution of ibuprofen-irinotecan-loaded beads was carried out by mixing 0.24 ml
beads with 200 ml PBS (Inverclyde, Bellshill, UK) and roller-mixed on a roller mixer.
At certain time point, the solution (5 ml) was taken out for concentration determination
by UV and same volume of fresh PBS was added to keep a sink condition.
Image analysis and sizing:
[0147] The loaded beads were placed under an Olympus microscope, about 200 beads were counted
for size distribution study by software (AnalySIS 5.0 Soft Image System GmbH), and
photos were taken under different light/contrast background for morphology study.
Determination of concentration of combination of ibuprofen and irinotecan
[0148] To determinate the concentration of each component in a combined drug solution, the
standard curves for absorption of predetermined concentrations of ibuprofen and irinotecan
at 263, 272 and 369 nm in water were measured. The principle is to determine the concentration
of irinotecan from the absorbance at 369 nm first, where ibuprofen has no absorption.
Then the concentration of ibuprofen could be calculated by subtracting the irinotecan
absorbance at 272 nm from the spectrum of drug mixture. Using 272 nm instead of 263
nm commonly used is to reduce the possible interference of DMSO residue in drug loading.
However, it was found that the ibuprofen absorbance is much lower compared to the
irinotecan due to the low water-solubility of ibuprofen, and the ibuprofen peak was
fully covered by irinotecan. Therefore the way using UV to determine ibuprofen concentration
in ibuprofen-irinotecan mixture is not accurate. In this study, the irinotecan concentration
was measured by UV, and ibuprofen concentration was measured by HPLC.
Loading ibuprofen and irinotecan into Beads
[0149] All the samples loaded with ibuprofen in the first step retain their spherical shape
and no ibuprofen crystals were seen to form. After irinotecan loading, Example 5-1
with high ibuprofen loading had a large amount of ibuprofen crystals appear on the
bead surface. In comparison, the Example 5-4 with the same amount of ibuprofen has
no crystals observed, which is due to the effect of the high content of castor oil
crystallisation inhibitor existing within beads. Therefore, the castor oil acts as
an excipient to prevent the formation of ibuprofen crystals by inhibiting crystal
formation.
[0150] Table 4 lists the drug loading in each sample. The irinotecan loading in all the
samples is close to 100%, the maximum irinotecan loading capacity for unloaded beads
being close to 50-60 mg/ml, and below that the loading efficiency is above 98%.
Table 4. Drug loading in Unloaded Beads
| Sample |
Target ibuprofen loading* (mg/ml) |
Actual ibuprofen loading (mg/ml) |
Target irinotecan loading (mg/ml) |
Actual irinotecan loading (mg/ml) |
| Ex 5-1 |
40 |
14.34** |
40.28 |
40.28 |
| Ex 5-2 |
20 |
10.41 |
40.28 |
40.28 |
| Ex 5-3 |
10 |
5.79 |
40.28 |
40.28 |
| Ex 5-4 |
40 |
11.68 |
40.28 |
40.28 |
* The data were estimated according to the total volume of DMSO and castor oil treated
as about 10 ml.
** Including the ibuprofen crystal on bead surface. |
[0151] The ibuprofen loading is relatively low, and the estimated loading efficiency is
between 29% to 58%. The lower target of loading of ibuprofen gives a relatively higher
loading efficiency. The reason of the relatively low ibuprofen loading is due to the
bead size shrinking when the beads contact with castor oil rich solution. Hence, the
drug loading decreased with the smaller volume of beads.
Size distribution of drug-loaded beads
[0152] The size distribution of drug-loaded beads is shown in Figure 10. The corresponding
parameters are listed in Table 5. The ibuprofen-loaded beads almost keep the same
size as the DC Bead without drug loading, in the range from 500 to 700 µm. However,
the size decreased significantly with irinotecan loading due to the increased hydrophobicity
of the drug-loaded beads, the average size decrease is about 140 to 150 µm. It is
noticed that the beads with variance of ibuprofen loading have almost the same mean
size and size distribution.
Table 5. Comparison of size distribution for drug loaded beads
| Sample |
Drug loaded |
Sizemax (µm) |
Sizemin (µm) |
Sizemean (µm) |
SD (µm) |
| 849BB/20-1 |
IBU* |
690 |
476 |
589 |
53.5 |
| 849BB/20-1 |
IBU-IRI** |
549 |
340 |
448 |
41.7 |
| 849BB/20-2 |
IBU |
688 |
470 |
592 |
47.4 |
| 849BB/20-2 |
IBU-IRI |
510 |
354 |
432 |
33.6 |
| 849BB/20-3 |
IBU |
670 |
474 |
585 |
56.0 |
| 849BB/20-3 |
IBU-IRI |
532 |
371 |
444 |
43.7 |
| 849BB/20-4 |
IBU-IRI |
527 |
362 |
446 |
36.1 |
• IBU: ibuprofen
** IRI: irinotecan |
Morphology of drug-loaded beads
[0153] A micrograph of ibuprofen-loaded beads of Example 5.1, demonstrates that the structure
of the loaded beads consist of a large core area with ibuprofen and castor oil, and
a layer on the bead surface free of drug and oil. Castor oil trapped inside the beads
provides the hydrophobic phase to retain ibuprofen and to prevent the formation of
ibuprofen crystals. The other Examples 5-2, 5.3 and 5.4 with ibuprofen in the first
loading step have the same structure shown here. In addition, some small oil droplets
were observed among the beads, which were the residues of mixture of castor oil and
ibuprofen in solution.
[0154] When irinotecan was loaded by roller-mixing overnight, ibuprofen crystals were observed
on the surface of the beads in Example 5.1, and bead aggregation occurred as the result
of crystal formation. Crystallisation was not found in other samples. The phenomenon
is due to the higher ibuprofen content in the beads, and not enough castor oil to
prevent crystal formation, when irinotecan was loaded. Although the irinotecan interacts
with the AMPS group in the beads, it still is hydrophobic and may tend to partially
dissolve in castor oil, which could reduce the solubility of ibuprofen. In the product
of Example 5.4, with a higher level of castor oil and high loading of ibuprofen, after
irinotecan loading, no ibuprofen crystals were observed.
Elution of drug-loaded beads
[0155] Figures 11 and 12 show the elution profile of irinotecan and ibuprofen from beads
into PBS at 25°C. In Figure 11, the elution rate of irinotecan under different castor
oil content and ibuprofen loading are almost the same. The irinotecan elution rate
is also comparable to that for irinotecan alone in which almost 100% of the drug was
eluted after 5 hours. This indicates that castor oil and ibuprofen loading have no
effect on irinotecan elution, and there is no interaction between ibuprofen and irinotecan.
In Figure 12, the ibuprofen elution is completed after 1 to 2 hr in PBS. Compared
to the ibuprofen elution from single drug-loaded beads, the elution again is similar
indicating no drug-drug interaction is occurring.
Example 6: In vitro Cytotoxicity Evaluation of Doxorubicin Loaded Beads using Human
HCC Cells (Reference).
[0156] Doxorubicin beads (500-700µm) were prepared according to the methods outlined in
Example 2 of
WO04071495. The elution of doxorubicin loaded beads in cell culture media with a human hepatocellular
liver carcinoma (HepG2) cell line was monitored. A Promega lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
assay was used to assess the cytotoxicity effects on the HepG2 cell line at 24, 48
and 72 hour time points.
Assay preparation
[0157] Using aseptic conditions, three sterile flat bottomed 96 well plates (Cellstar®,
655180) were seeded with 20,000 HepG2 cells in 200µl media and left in an incubator
(37°C, 5% CO
2) for 20 hours. After incubation, the media was carefully aspirated from all of the
wells and 200µl of PRF media was added to the wells. One, three and ten pre-loaded
doxorubicin beads (37.5 mg per ml of beads) were counted under aseptic conditions
into 200µl phenol red free cell culture media in a 96 well plate.
Doxorubicin elution assay
[0158] The plate was incubated at 37ºC, 5% CO
2. At 24, 48 and 72 hour time points, 100µl of each well were scanned at 490 nm (Biotek,
ELX800). The elution was calculated by comparing the absorbance to a standard calibration
curve.
[0159] At longer time periods and higher bead numbers more doxorubicin was released into
the cell culture media (Figure 13). The elution profile is different for different
bead numbers; the plateau for 10 beads at later time period may be due to saturation
of the cell culture media with doxorubicin.
Cell viability assay
[0160] This assay measures the amount of LDH released from the remaining viable cells after
the dead cell debris have been washed away. The LDH is released after the viable cell
membranes have been compromised by freezing the cells.
[0161] At each time point, the media and beads was carefully aspirated from the original
plate and 200µl sterile PBS was added and removed three times to wash the cells of
any residual doxorubicin and left over cell debris. 200µl PRF media was added before
the plate was subjected to -80ºC for one hour; this intentionally compromised all
of the cell membranes, releasing all lactate dehydrogenase enzyme from the remaining
live cells. Upon removal from the freezer the plate was promptly placed in an incubator
under standard conditions (37ºC, 5% CO
2) for thirty minutes. 50µl of the supernatant was removed from all the wells into
respective fresh wells, followed by 50µl of the LDH assay substrate mix (Promega).
The original plate with cells was kept for further analysis. The fresh plate was left
a room temperature in the dark. After 30 minutes 50µl of stop solution (acetic acid
(1M)) was added to terminate the reaction. The plate was then read using a plate reader
(Biotek) at 490nm, if the reading was too high (>3) the solution was diluted by taking
75µl supernatant and 75µl PRF media. The percentage of compromised cells was calculated.
[0162] The number of viable cells decreases as the exposure to and number of pre-loaded
doxorubicin DC beads increases (Figure 14).
Example 7: Cytotoxicity of Combinations of Doxorubicin Beads and Rapamycin Beads and
in-vitro
[0163] A LDH assay was used to assess the cytotoxicity effects on the HepG2 cell line at
24, 48 and 72 hour time points with different rapamycin/doxorubicin bead combinations.
The rapamycin beads (500-700µm) were loaded and analysed described in
PCT/EP2007/50690. The resulting loading was 21.4mg/ml.
[0164] The doxorubicin beads (500-700µm) were loaded with 37.5 mg per ml of beads as described
in
WO04071495.
Assay preparation
[0165] Using aseptic conditions, three sterile flat bottomed 96 well plates (Cellstar®,
655180) were seeded with 20,000 HepG2 cells in 200µl media and left in an incubator
(37°C, 5% CO
2) for 20 hours.
[0166] After incubation, the media was carefully aspirated from all of the wells and 200µl
of PRF media was added to the wells.
[0167] Pre-loaded doxorubicin beads and pre-loaded rapamycin beads were counted under aseptic
conditions into 200µl phenol red free cell culture media in a 96 well plate. The number
of each beads placed in each well can be seen in table 5 (n=6). A control of each
drug type was carried out alongside the assay (1-5 beads of one drug type only).
Table 6: Matrix showing beads ratios
| |
Number of beads per well |
| Rapamycin beads |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
| Doxorubicin beads |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
[0168] After 72 hours exposure to the cells, an LDH assay as described in Example 6 was
carried out on the controls and samples in Table 6.
[0169] An MTS assay was also conducted on the wells. At 72hrs, the media from all wells
was cautiously removed and each well washed three times with 200µl sterile PBS. After
adding 100µl PRF media to each well, 20µl of the prepared MTS solution (Promega) was
also added. After a two hours incubation (37°C, 5% CO
2) the plate was read at 490nm using the plate reader and like the LDH assay, if the
reading was too high the samples were diluted (75µl PRF media: 75µl samples).
Synergy of rapamycin and doxorubicin
[0170] The cell viability experiment with rapamycin beads and doxorubicin beads in different
ratios allow any drug synergy to be established. A single rapamycin bead and a single
doxorubicin bead together in one well left fewer viable cells than two beads of one
drug type. This trend is seen throughout the bead combinations tested (Figure 15 &
16). A similar trend is noted with the MTS assay (Figures 17 & 18).
[0171] Using Calcusyn v2.1 (Biosoft) a combination index value can be established for each
combination using the data from the LDH assay (Table 7). The value of the combination
index relates to a scale (Table 7). Using these descriptions a strong synergism is
noted under these conditions.
Table 6: Combination Index (CI) Values and description. (Fa = fraction affected by the dose,
1= 100% kill, 0= no kill).
| Rapamycin(beads) |
Doxorubicin(beads) |
Fa |
CI |
| 1 |
1 |
0.984 |
0.007 |
| 1 |
2 |
0.991 |
0.002 |
| 1 |
3 |
0.998 |
1.06e-5 |
| 1 |
4 |
0.994 |
0.001 |
| 2 |
1 |
0.997 |
1.52e-0.005 |
| 3 |
1 |
0.988 |
0.002 |
Table 7: Combination Index Values and description
| Range of CI |
Description |
| <0.1 |
+++++ Very strong synergism |
| 0.1-0.3 |
++++ Strong synergism |
| 0.3-0.7 |
+++ Synergism |
| 0.7-0.85 |
++ Moderate synergism |
| 0.85-0.90 |
+ Slight synergism |
| 0.90-1.10 |
± Nearly additive |
| 1.10-1.20 |
- Slight antagonism |
| 1.20-1.45 |
-- Moderate antagonism |
[0172] As can be seen all doxorubicin-rapamycin combinations gave a CI that indicated a
very strong synergism between the two drugs. Both assays show synergy between both
drugs. The data do not show a preferred ratio, but synergy is shown for all combinations.
Example 8: In Vitro Cytotoxicity of Rapamycin and Doxorubicin Loaded Beads Individually and in Combination
[0173] Example 7 was repeated substantially as described, with an extended number of beads
of one of the drugs. The results of the MTS assay, i.e. showing cell viability % (log
scale) of HepG2 cells after 72 hr exposure, concluded as the mean of 6 samples, is
shown in Figure 19.
Results
[0174] When eluted individually, doxorubicin was more cytotoxic to the cells than rapamycin
(Figure 1). However, when used in combination, a further reduction in cell viability
is observed. The combination indices for all bead combinations are <0.1; this indicates
strong positive synergy between the two eluted drugs.
Example 9.: Synergy of Rapamycin and Doxorubicin on Human Pancreatic Carcinoma (PSN1)
and Human Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HepG2) Cell Lines in-vitro
[0175] An MTS assay was used to assess the synergistic cytotoxic effects of dual loaded
beads on HepG2 and PSN1 cells. The rapamycin loaded beads and the doxorubicin loaded
beads were the same as those described in Example 7. The dual loaded doxorubicin and
rapamycin loaded beads were loaded and analysed as described in Example 4 Method 2
using a 1ml 60mg/ml rapamycin solution and 1ml 37.5mg/ml doxorubicin solution. The
resulting loading in the dual loaded beads was 21.4mg/ml rapamycin and 35.5mg/ml doxorubicin.
Assay preparation
[0176] The assay was prepared as described in Example 7 using HepG2 cells and additional
plates of PSN1 cells for analysis.
Cell viability
[0177] Pre-loaded doxorubicin beads, pre-loaded rapamycin beads and dual rapamycin and doxorubicin
pre-loaded beads were counted (1, 2 or 3) and added to the prepared 20,000 PSN1 or
HepG2 cells in cell culture media and placed in an incubator (37ºC, 5% CO
2).
[0178] An MTS assay (described in example 7) was conducted after 24, 48 and 72hrs exposure.
[0179] The dual loaded bead combination showed greater cell death than either mono-loaded
bead at all time points for PSN1 cells (figure 20-22) and HepG2 cells (figure 23-25).
Example 10: Dual loaded bead compared to two mono-loaded beads
[0180] An MTS assay was used to demonstrate that there was no difference in the cytotoxic
effects of one doxorubicin and rapamycin dual-loaded bead compared to two mono-loaded
beads (one doxorubicin loaded and one rapamycin loaded).
[0181] The drug loaded beads used were the same batches as those described in Example 9.
[0182] The assay was setup as described in Example 7 using HepG2 cells. One to four dual
loaded beads were added to the prepared 20,000 HepG2 cells in 200µl media and the
equivalent dose using mono-loaded beads were added to another well in the same volume
of media. The plates were placed in an incubator (37ºC, 5% CO
2).
[0183] An MTS assay (described in example 7) was conducted after 24, 48 and 72hrs exposure.
[0184] The cytotoxic effect of the drug eluting beads was similar regardless of whether
the drugs were loaded in one bead or two separate beads (figure 26-28).