Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery Indiana University School of Medicine South Bend Indiana USA
2. Harper Cancer Research Institute University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Indiana USA
3. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Indiana USA
4. Department of Pediatrics Indiana University School of Medicine South Bend Indiana USA
5. Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center Buffalo New York USA
Abstract
AbstractCholangiocarcinoma (CCA), an aggressive biliary tract cancer, carries a grim prognosis with a 5‐year survival rate of 5%–15%. Standard chemotherapy regimens for CCA, gemcitabine plus cisplatin (GemCis) or its recently approved combination with durvalumab demonstrate dismal clinical activity, yielding a median survival of 12–14 months. Increased serotonin accumulation and secretion have been implicated in the oncogenic activity of CCA. This study investigated the therapeutic efficacy of telotristat ethyl (TE), a tryptophan hydroxylase inhibitor blocking serotonin biosynthesis, in combination with standard chemotherapies in preclinical CCA models. Nab‐paclitaxel (NPT) significantly enhanced animal survival (60%), surpassing the marginal effects of TE (11%) or GemCis (9%) in peritoneal dissemination xenografts. Combining TE with GemCis (26%) or NPT (68%) further increased survival rates. In intrahepatic (iCCA), distal (dCCA) and perihilar (pCCA) subcutaneous xenografts, TE exhibited substantial tumour growth inhibition (41%–53%) compared to NPT (56%–69%) or GemCis (37%–58%). The combination of TE with chemotherapy demonstrated enhanced tumour growth inhibition in all three cell‐derived xenografts (67%–90%). PDX studies revealed TE's marked inhibition of tumour growth (40%–73%) compared to GemCis (80%–86%) or NPT (57%–76%). Again, combining TE with chemotherapy exhibited an additive effect. Tumour cell proliferation reduction aligned with tumour growth inhibition in all CDX and PDX tumours. Furthermore, TE treatment consistently decreased serotonin levels in all tumours under all therapeutic conditions. This investigation decisively demonstrated the antitumor efficacy of TE across a spectrum of CCA preclinical models, suggesting that combination therapies involving TE, particularly for patients exhibiting serotonin overexpression, hold the promise of improving clinical CCA therapy.
Funder
School of Medicine, Indiana University