Journal of Hepatology
Volume 51, Issue 5 , Pages 970-972, November 2009

The evasive promise of antiangiogenic therapy

Institute of Clinical Pharmacology and Visceral Research, University of Berne, Murtenstrasse 35, 3010 Berne, Switzerland

Department of Visceral Medicine, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland

published online 21 July 2009.

Special Section Editors: Peter R. Galle, Peter L.M. Jansen, Francesco Negro

Accelerated metastasis after short-term treatment with a potent inhibitor of tumor angiogenesis. Ebos JM, Lee CR, Cruz-Munoz W, Bjarnason GA, Christensen JG, Kerbel RS.

Herein we report that the VEGFR/PDGFR kinase inhibitor sunitinib/SU11248 can accelerate metastatic tumor growth and decrease overall survival in mice receiving short-term therapy in various metastasis assays, including after intravenous injection of tumor cells or after removal of primary orthotopically grown tumors. Acceleration of metastasis was also observed in mice receiving sunitinib prior to intravenous implantation of tumor cells, suggesting possible “metastatic conditioning” in multiple organs. Similar findings with additional VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors implicate a class-specific effect for such agents. Importantly, these observations of metastatic acceleration were in contrast to the demonstrable antitumor benefits obtained when the same human breast cancer cells, as well as mouse or human melanoma cells, were grown orthotopically as primary tumors and subjected to identical sunitinib treatments.

[Abstract reproduced by permission of Cancer Cell 2009;15:232–239]

Antiangiogenic therapy elicits malignant progression of tumors to increased local invasion and distant metastasis. Pàez-Ribes M, Allen E, Hudock J, Takeda T, Okuyama H, Viñals F, Inoue M, Bergers G, Hanahan D, Casanovas O.

Multiple angiogenesis inhibitors have been therapeutically validated in preclinical cancer models, and several in clinical trials. Here we report that angiogenesis inhibitors targeting the VEGF pathway demonstrate antitumor effects in mouse models of pancreatic neuroendocrine carcinoma and glioblastoma but concomitantly elicit tumor adaptation and progression to stages of greater malignancy, with heightened invasiveness and in some cases increased lymphatic and distant metastasis. Increased invasiveness is also seen by genetic ablation of the Vegf-A gene in both models, substantiating the results of the pharmacological inhibitors. The realization that potent angiogenesis inhibition can alter the natural history of tumors by increasing invasion and metastasis warrants clinical investigation, as the prospect has important implications for the development of enduring antiangiogenic therapies.

[Abstract reproduced by permission of Cancer Cell 2009;15:220–231]

 

 The author declared that he does not have anything to disclose regarding funding or conflict of interest with respect to this manuscript.

PII: S0168-8278(09)00466-8

doi:10.1016/j.jhep.2009.07.006

Journal of Hepatology
Volume 51, Issue 5 , Pages 970-972, November 2009