Drug-induced Caspase-3 Activation in a Ewing Tumor Cell Line and Primary Ewing Tumor Cells

2004 
Ewing sarcoma is a rare malignancy occurring in childhood and adolescence which has a prognosis of about 50% long-term event-free survival, depending on risk factors such as tumor volume, initial metastases at the time of diagnosis and tumor response to presurgical chemotherapy. In order to tailor therapy to the individual patient, new prognostic factors need to be identified. In this study, we showed that etoposide and actinomycin D kill Ewing tumor cells (RD-ES cell line) mainly via a caspase-dependent mechanism. Both drugs induced a significant caspase-3 activation, which can be detected with a new caspase-3 assay. Dose-response analyses showed that induction of cell death and caspase-3 activation is mediated by similar concentration ranges of both drugs. In addition to the cell line, caspase-3 activation was also shown during drug-mediated stimulation of freshly isolated cells from tumor biopsies. In conclusion, actinomycin D and etoposide stimulated caspase-3 activation in a Ewing tumor cell line and in freshly isolated tumor cells, causing drug-induced cell death. Thus, determination of caspase-3 activation might be a suitable method for drug sensitivity testing in patients with Ewing tumors before initiating treatment. This assay could therefore help individualize therapy in future tumor patients. Ewing tumors are a rare type of solid malignancy located primarily in bone tissue, the annual incidence of which is
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