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Dive into the research topics where Rohit Seth is active.

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Featured researches published by Rohit Seth.


Gene Therapy | 2013

Synergistic cytotoxicity of oncolytic reovirus in combination with cisplatin-paclitaxel doublet chemotherapy

Victoria Roulstone; Katie Twigger; Shane Zaidi; T. Pencavel; Joan Kyula; Christine L. White; Martin McLaughlin; Rohit Seth; Eleni M. Karapanagiotou; David Mansfield; Matt Coffey; Gerard J. Nuovo; Richard G. Vile; Hardev Pandha; Alan Melcher; Kevin J. Harrington

Oncolytic reovirus is currently under active investigation in a range of tumour types. Early phase studies have shown that this agent has modest monotherapy efficacy and its future development is likely to focus on combination regimens with cytotoxic chemotherapy. Indeed, phase I/II clinical trials have confirmed that reovirus can be safely combined with cytotoxic drugs, including a platin–taxane doublet regimen, which is currently being tested in a phase III clinical trial in patients with relapsed/metastatic head and neck cancer. Therefore, we have tested this triple (reovirus, cisplatin, paclitaxel) combination therapy in a panel of four head and neck cancer cell lines. Using the combination index (CI) method, the triple therapy demonstrated synergistic cytotoxicity in vitro in both malignant and non-malignant cell lines. In head and neck cancer cell lines, this was associated with enhanced caspase 3 and 7 cleavage, but no increase in viral replication. In vitro analyses confirmed colocalisation of markers of reovirus infection and caspase 3. Triple therapy was significantly more effective than reovirus or cisplatin–paclitaxel in athymic nude mice. These data suggest that the combination of reovirus plus platin–taxane doublet chemotherapy has significant activity in head and neck cancer and underpin the current phase III study in this indication.


British Journal of Cancer | 2012

Combination of a fusogenic glycoprotein, pro-drug activation and oncolytic HSV as an intravesical therapy for superficial bladder cancer

Guy Simpson; Andras Horvath; Nicola E. Annels; T. Pencavel; Stephen Metcalf; Rohit Seth; P Peschard; T Price; Robert Coffin; H Mostafid; Alan Melcher; Kevin J. Harrington; Hardev Pandha

Background:There are still no effective treatments for superficial bladder cancer (SBC)/non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. Following treatment, 20% of patients still develop metastatic disease. Superficial bladder cancer is often multifocal, has high recurrences after surgical resection and recurs after intravesical live Bacillus Calmette–Guérin. OncovexGALV/CD, an oncolytic herpes simplex virus-1, has shown enhanced local tumour control by combining oncolysis with the expression of a highly potent pro-drug activating gene and the fusogenic glycoprotein.Methods:In vitro fusion/prodrug/apoptotic cell-based assays. In vivo orthotopic bladder tumour model, visualised by computed microtomography.Results:Treatment of seven human bladder carcinoma cell lines with the virus resulted in tumour cell killing through oncolysis, pro-drug activation and glycoprotein fusion. OncovexGALV/CD and mitomycin C showed a synergistic effect, whereas the co-administration with cisplatin or gemcitabine showed an antagonistic effect in vitro. Transitional cell cancer (TCC) cells follow an apoptotic cell death pathway after infection with OncovexGALV/CD with or without 5-FC. In vivo results showed that intravesical treatment with OncovexGALV/CD + prodrug (5-FC) reduced the average tumour volume by over 95% compared with controls.Discussion:Our in vitro and in vivo results indicate that OncovexGALV/CD can improve local tumour control within the bladder, and potentially alter its natural history.


Oncogene | 2014

Synergistic cytotoxicity of radiation and oncolytic Lister strain vaccinia in V600D/E BRAF mutant melanoma depends on JNK and TNF-α signaling

Joan Kyula; Aadil A. Khan; David Mansfield; Eleni M. Karapanagiotou; Martin McLaughlin; Roulstone; Shane Zaidi; T. Pencavel; Yann Touchefeu; Rohit Seth; Nanhai G. Chen; Y. A Yu; Q Zhang; Alan Melcher; Richard G. Vile; Hardev Pandha; M Ajaz; Aladar A. Szalay; Kevin J. Harrington

Melanoma is an aggressive skin cancer that carries an extremely poor prognosis when local invasion, nodal spread or systemic metastasis has occurred. Recent advances in melanoma biology have revealed that RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK signaling has a pivotal role in governing disease progression and treatment resistance. Proof-of-concept clinical studies have shown that direct BRAF inhibition yields impressive responses in advanced disease but these are short-lived as treatment resistance rapidly emerges. Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop new targeted strategies for BRAF mutant melanoma. As such, oncolytic viruses represent a promising cancer-specific approach with significant activity in melanoma. This study investigated interactions between genetically-modified vaccinia virus (GLV-1h68) and radiotherapy in melanoma cell lines with BRAF mutant, Ras mutant or wild-type genotype. Preclinical studies revealed that GLV-1h68 combined with radiotherapy significantly increased cytotoxicity and apoptosis relative to either single agent in V600DBRAF/V600EBRAF mutant melanoma in vitro and in vivo. The mechanism of enhanced cytotoxicity with GLV-1h68/radiation (RT) was independent of viral replication and due to attenuation of JNK, p38 and ERK MAPK phosphorylation specifically in BRAF mutant cells. Further studies showed that JNK pathway inhibition sensitized BRAF mutant cells to GLV-1h68-mediated cell death, mimicking the effect of RT. GLV-1h68 infection activated MAPK signaling in V600DBRAF/V600EBRAF mutant cell lines and this was associated with TNF-α secretion which, in turn, provided a prosurvival signal. Combination GLV-1h68/RT (or GLV-1h68/JNK inhibition) caused abrogation of TNF-α secretion. These data provide a strong rationale for combining GLV-1h68 with irradiation in V600D/EBRAF mutant tumors.


Oral Oncology | 2013

Oncolytic Vaccinia virus and radiotherapy in head and neck cancer

David Mansfield; T. Pencavel; Joan Kyula; Shane Zaidi; Victoria Roulstone; Khin Thway; Lena Karapanagiotou; Aadil A. Khan; Martin McLaughlin; Yann Touchefeu; Rohit Seth; Alan Melcher; Richard Vile; Hardev Pandha; Kevin J. Harrington

OBJECTIVE Oncolytic forms of attenuated Vaccinia virus are now in clinical development, assessing the compatibility of this novel treatment with radiotherapy may reveal exploitable synergistic relationships. MATERIALS AND METHODS In vitro analyses of cell killing, cell cycle effects and caspase activation were carried out on HN3, HN5, CAL27, Detroit, SIHN5B, and PJ41 cells. In vivo studies of the virus and X-radiation were performed on H&N xenografts in CD1 nude mice. RESULTS Cell killing in vitro was demonstrated to be dose- and time-dependent. Infection causes an increase in S-phase and sub-G1 cells. A dose dependent increase in active caspase-3 indicated induction of apoptosis. Xenografts injected with Vaccinia stabilised and frequently completely regressed. Combination with radiation generated additional cell death, induction of caspase activity and in vivo further improved long term regression rates. CONCLUSIONS These data support continued exploration of this therapy combination and indicates potential for clinical trials in head and neck cancer.


Gene Therapy | 2009

Microvascular free tissue transfer for gene delivery: in vivo evaluation of different routes of plasmid and adenoviral delivery.

V. K. Agrawal; K M Copeland; Yolanda Barbachano; A Rahim; Rohit Seth; Christine L. White; Mohan Hingorani; Christopher M. Nutting; M Kelly; Paul Harris; Hardev Pandha; Alan Melcher; R G Vile; C Porter; Kevin J. Harrington

Transfer of healthy autologous tissue as a microvascular free flap facilitates reconstruction during ablative cancer surgery. In addition to filling surgical defects, free flaps might concentrate viral vectors at the tumour bed and mediate local therapeutic effects. We evaluated the magnitude, topography and duration of luciferase gene expression after plasmid and adenoviral delivery in rat superficial inferior epigastric (SIE) flaps. For plasmid delivery, luciferase expression was significantly increased by all transduction routes (topical, intraflap injection, intravascular) (P<0.01) at day 1, but not at day 7. The spread of luciferase expression was significantly different between the 4 groups at 1 day (P=0.026) and was greatest for flaps transduced by intravascular injection. For adenoviral transduction, total radiance was significantly different between the transduced groups at 1, 14 and 28 days (P<0.05 for all comparisons). The highest levels of radiance were seen in the intravascular group. There was a statistically significant difference in the spread of light emission between the 3 groups at 1 (P=0.009) and 14 (P=0.013) days, but this was no longer evident at 28 days. Intravascular adenoviral delivery yields high-level, diffuse and durable gene expression in rat SIE flaps and is suitable for examination in therapeutic models.


International Journal of Cancer | 2015

Isolated limb perfusion with melphalan, tumour necrosis factor-alpha and oncolytic vaccinia virus improves tumour targeting and prolongs survival in a rat model of advanced extremity sarcoma.

Tim Pencavel; Michelle J. Wilkinson; David Mansfield; Aadil A. Khan; Rohit Seth; Eleni M. Karapanagiotou; Victoria Roulstone; Richard J. Aguilar; Nanhai G. Chen; Aladar A. Szalay; Andrew Hayes; Kevin J. Harrington

Isolated limb perfusion (ILP) is a treatment for advanced extremity sarcoma and in‐transit melanoma. Advancing this procedure by investigating the addition of novel agents, such as cancer‐selective oncolytic viruses, may improve both the therapeutic efficacy of ILP and the tumour‐targeted delivery of oncolytic virotherapy. Standard in vitro assays were used to characterise single agent and combinatorial activities of melphalan, tumour necrosis factor‐alpha (TNF‐α) and Lister strain vaccinia virus (GLV‐1h68) against BN175 rat sarcoma cells. An orthotopic model of advanced extremity sarcoma was used to evaluate survival of animals after ILP with combinations of TNF‐α, melphalan and GLV‐1h68. We investigated the efficiency of viral tumour delivery by ILP compared to intravenous therapy, the locoregional and systemic biodistribution of virus after ILP, and the effect of mode of administration on antibody response. The combination of melphalan and GLV‐1h68 was synergistic in vitro. The addition of virus to standard ILP regimens was well tolerated and demonstrated superior tumour targeting compared to intravenous administration. Triple therapy (melphalan/TNF‐α/GLV‐1h68) resulted in increased tumour growth delay and enhanced survival compared to other treatment regimens. Live virus was recovered in large amounts from perfused regions, but in smaller amounts from systemic organs. The addition of oncolytic vaccinia virus to existing TNF‐α/melphalan‐based ILP strategies results in survival advantage in an immunocompetent rat model of advanced extremity sarcoma. Virus administered by ILP has superior tumour targeting compared to intravenous delivery. Further evaluation and clinical translation of this approach is warranted.


Gene Therapy | 2010

Locoregional intravascular viral therapy of cancer: precision guidance for Paris's arrow?

T. Pencavel; Rohit Seth; Andrew Hayes; Alan Melcher; Hardev Pandha; Richard G. Vile; Kevin J. Harrington

Viral therapy of cancer includes strategies such as viral transduction of tumour cells with ‘suicide genes’, using viral infection to trigger immune-mediated tumour cell death and using oncolytic viruses for their direct anti-tumour action. However, problems still remain in terms of adequate viral delivery to tumours. A role is also emerging for single-organ isolation and perfusion. Having begun with the advent of isolated limb perfusion for extremity malignancy, experimental systems have been developed for the perfusion of other organs, particularly the liver, kidneys and lungs. These are beginning to be adopted into clinical treatment pathways. The combination of these two modalities is potentially significant. Locoregional perfusion increases the exposure of tumour cells to viral agents. In addition, the avoidance of systemic elimination through the immune and reticulo-endothelial systems should provide a mechanism for increased transduction/infection of target cells. The translation of laboratory research to clinical practice would occur within the context of perfusion programmes, which are already established in the clinic. Many of these programmes include the use of vasoactive cytokines such as tumour necrosis factor-α, which may have an effect on viral uptake. Evidence of activation of specific anti-tumour immunological responses by intratumoural and other existing methods of viral administration raises the intriguing possibility of a locoregional therapy, with the ability to affect distant sites of disease. In this review, we examined the state of the literature in this area and summarized current findings before indicating likely areas of continuing interest.


Lancet Oncology | 2012

Targeted gene delivery by free-tissue transfer in oncoplastic reconstruction

Rohit Seth; Aadil A. Khan; Tim Pencavel; Kevin J. Harrington; Paul Harris

Surgery is the most effective curative treatment for various tumour types. Despite a current preference for conservative surgery, radical excision retains a clearly defined role in modern management of locoregional disease. Extirpative defects are reconstructed routinely using free-tissue transfer from a distant donor site. Although these free flaps currently provide no direct therapeutic benefit, advances in gene-delivery techniques offer the possibility to genetically modify flaps to produce potent targeted treatments with greater anatomical control. Several promising therapeutic strategies, including virus-directed enzyme prodrug therapy, genetic radionuclide therapy, and free-flap radioprotection, have the potential to extend the role of the free flap beyond its immediate goal of restoring form and function to patients, but challenges exist. Work to translate therapeutic free-tissue transfer from preclinical study to clinical use is in progress.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

Genetically modified lentiviruses that preserve microvascular function protect against late radiation damage in normal tissues

Aadil A. Khan; James T. Paget; Martin McLaughlin; Joan Kyula; Michelle J. Wilkinson; T. Pencavel; David Mansfield; Victoria Roulstone; Rohit Seth; Martin Halle; Navita Somaiah; Jessica K.R. Boult; Simon P. Robinson; Hardev Pandha; Richard Vile; Alan Melcher; Paul Harris; Kevin J. Harrington

Vascular protection using gene therapy can reduce the late toxicities of radiotherapy. Skin protection from radiation goes viral With recent improvements in cancer therapy, an increasing number of people are living as cancer survivors, in many cases with long-term side effects caused by the cancer treatment. These effects include radiation-induced vascular dysfunction and fibrosis, which interfere with tissue reconstruction using skin flaps after mastectomy in breast cancer patients. Khan et al. developed a virus-based gene therapy approach to address this problem, up-regulating one gene to preserve skin flap volume and knocking down another to reduce radiation-induced skin contracture. The authors tested their approach in rat models of radiation therapy and skin flap reconstruction and also demonstrated that the gene therapy did not interfere with the anticancer effects of radiation. Improvements in cancer survival mean that long-term toxicities, which contribute to the morbidity of cancer survivorship, are being increasingly recognized. Late adverse effects (LAEs) in normal tissues after radiotherapy (RT) are characterized by vascular dysfunction and fibrosis causing volume loss and tissue contracture, for example, in the free flaps used for immediate breast reconstruction after mastectomy. We evaluated the efficacy of lentivirally delivered superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) overexpression and connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) knockdown by short hairpin RNA in reducing the severity of LAEs in an animal model of free flap LAEs. Vectors were delivered by intra-arterial injection, ex vivo, to target the vascular compartment. LVSOD2 and LVshCTGF monotherapy before irradiation resulted in preservation of flap volume or reduction in skin contracture, respectively. Flaps transduced with combination therapy experienced improvements in both volume loss and skin contracture. Both therapies reduced the fibrotic burden after irradiation. LAEs were associated with impaired vascular perfusion, loss of endothelial permeability, and stromal hypoxia, which were all reversed in the treatment model. Using a tumor recurrence model, we showed that SOD2 overexpression in normal tissues did not compromise the efficacy of RT against tumor cells but appeared to enhance it. LVSOD2 and LVshCTGF combination therapy by targeted, intravascular delivery reduced LAE severities in normal tissues without compromising the efficacy of RT and warrants translational evaluation as a free flap–targeted gene therapy.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2015

Adenovirally delivered enzyme prodrug therapy with herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase in composite tissue free flaps shows therapeutic efficacy in rat models of glioma.

Rohit Seth; Aadil A. Khan; T. Pencavel; Michelle J. Wilkinson; Joan Kyula; Guy Simpson; Hardev Pandha; Alan Melcher; Richard G. Vile; Paul Harris; Kevin J. Harrington

Introduction: Free flap gene therapy exploits a novel therapeutic window when viral vectors can be delivered into a flap ex vivo. The authors investigated the therapeutic potential of an adenovirally-delivered thymidine kinase/ganciclovir prodrug system expressed following vector delivery into a free flap. Methods: The authors demonstrated direct in vitro cytotoxicity by treating a panel of malignant cell lines with the thymidine kinase/ganciclovir system and demonstrated significant cell kill proportional to the multiplicity of infection of adenoviral vector expressing thymidine kinase. Bystander cytotoxicity was demonstrated using conditioned media from producer cells (expressing adenovirally-delivered thymidine kinase and treated with ganciclovir) to demonstrate cytotoxicity in naive tumor cells. The authors investigated the effect of adenoviral vector expressing thymidine kinase/ganciclovir therapy in vivo, using models of microscopic and macroscopic residual disease in a rodent superficial inferior epigastric artery flap model. Results: The authors observed retardation of tumor volume growth in both microscopic (p = 0.0004) and macroscopic (p = 0.0005) residual disease models and prolongation of animal survival. Gene expression studies demonstrated that viral genomic material was found predominantly in flap tissues but declined over time. Conclusions: The authors describe the utility of virally delivered enzyme/prodrug therapy, using a free flap as a vehicle for delivery. They discuss the merits and limitations of this approach and the unique role of therapeutic free flaps among reconstructive techniques available to the plastic surgeon.

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Kevin J. Harrington

Institute of Cancer Research

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Aadil A. Khan

Institute of Cancer Research

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T. Pencavel

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Paul Harris

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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David Mansfield

Institute of Cancer Research

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Joan Kyula

Institute of Cancer Research

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Tim Pencavel

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Martin McLaughlin

Institute of Cancer Research

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