- Hexadecylphosphocholine differs from conventional cytostatic agents.
Hexadecylphosphocholine differs from conventional cytostatic agents.
Alkylphosphocholines, and especially their main representative hexadecylphosphocholine (HPC), show high anticancer activity in methylnitrosourea (MNU)-induced autochthonous rat mammary carcinoma. The regression of MNU-induced rat mammary carcinoma during HPC treatment can be evaluated by computed tomography and sonography. This allows a noninvasive monitoring of therapy in vivo (tumor size, morphology, and blood supply). Both diagnostic modalities can show a rapid concentric decrease in tumor volume as well as the appearance of cystic, scarry, and necrotic areas in the tumor tissue as a result of HPC treatment. In addition, prior to, during and after therapy tumor perfusion can be assessed by color Doppler sonography in vivo. A more than 4-fold difference in HPC efficacy was observed when the colony growth of explanted MNU-induced mammary carcinoma cells was measured in the methylcellulose colony assay (IC50 = 180 mumol HPC/l) and the Hamburger Salmon colony assay (IC50 = 740 mumol HPC/l). In the latter assay, growth of concomitantly seeded untransformed cells, especially of fibroblasts, is much lower than in the methyl-cellulose colony assay. We therefore assume that the antitumor efficacy of HPC against MNU-induced mammary carcinoma is enhanced by neighboring cells such as fibroblasts. Cell culture experiments with the three MNU-induced rat mammary carcinoma cell clones 1-C-2, 1-C-30, and 1-C-32 revealed IC50 values in the range of 50-70 mumol HPC/l. The volume of 1-C-2 cells increased up to 4-fold after 72 h of permanent exposure to 100 mumol HPC/l, a concentration that completely inhibited proliferation of tumor cell numbers without being cytotoxic. Nucleotide triphosphate levels dropped significantly after 24 h and were slowly restored in spite of continued exposure. After 72 h, they nearly reached those levels observed in plateau-phase cells. This suggests that HPC-induced growth inhibition has similarities with physiologically occurring growth arrest. Finally, replication of RNA viruses and DNA viruses was suppressed 30-fold and 7-fold, respectively, at low concentrations of HPC (12 mumol/l), which caused no or negligible growth inhibition in the virus-harboring cells, thus demonstrating specific antiviral activity of HPC. From these observations we conclude that HPC differs in many important aspects from conventional cytostatic agents and is certainly worth following-up in further investigations.