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  3. Evaluation of kinase-inhibitors nilotinib and everolimus against alveolar echinococcosis in vitro and in a mouse model
 

Evaluation of kinase-inhibitors nilotinib and everolimus against alveolar echinococcosis in vitro and in a mouse model

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.126322
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.exppara.2018.04.002
PubMed ID
29625098
Description
nfection with the larval stage (metacestode) of the fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis leads to a primary hepatic disease referred to as alveolar echinococcosis (AE). The progressive disease can be lethal if untreated. In cases where complete parasite resection by surgery is not feasible, the current treatment regimens of AE consist of chemotherapy with the parasitostatic benzimidazoles albendazole or mebendazole over decades. Kinase-inhibitors currently administered in various cancer treatments are of increasing interest also as anti-parasitic drugs due to previous promising in vitro results. In order to search for novel drug targets and treatment regimens, nilotinib (AMN107; Tasigna®), an Abl-tyrosine kinase inhibitor and everolimus (RAD001; Afinitor®), a serine/threonine-kinase inhibitor, were tested for their treatment efficacy against metacestode vesicles of E. multilocularis in vitro and in BALB/c mice. In vitro treatment with 200 μM nilotinib caused drug-induced alterations after 12 days, and everolimus exerted parasite damage at concentrations dosing from 40 to 100 μM after 5 and 12 days of in vitro exposure. Nilotinib (100 mg/kg) + erythromycin (to increase nilotinib plasma levels: 10 mg/kg intraperitoneal) or everolimus (5 mg/kg) were formulated in honey and administered daily for three weeks and subsequently twice a week for an additional three weeks in experimentally infected mice. Treatments did not result in any reduction of parasite growth compared to untreated control groups, whereas oral treatment with albendazole (200 mg/kg) was highly effective. Combined application of the kinase-inhibitors with albendazole did not lead to a synergistic or additive treatment efficacy compared to albendazole treatment alone. These results show that neither nilotinib nor everolimus represent valuable alternatives to the current treatment regimens against AE.
Date of Publication
2018-05
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 630 Agriculture
500 Science > 570 Life sciences; biology
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Joekel, Deborah E.
Lundström Stadelmann, Brittaorcid-logo
Institut für Parasitologie (IPA)
Müllhaupt, Beat
Hemphill, Andrew
Institut für Parasitologie (IPA)
Deplazes, Peter
Additional Credits
Institut für Parasitologie (IPA)
Series
Experimental parasitology
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
0014-4894
Access(Rights)
restricted
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