| Literature DB >> 20414333 |
Ruman Rahman1, Stuart Smith, Cheryl Rahman, Richard Grundy.
Abstract
Despite advances in surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapeutics, patients with malignant glioma have a dismal prognosis. The formations of aberrant tumour vasculature and glioma cell invasion are major obstacles for effective treatment. Angiogenesis is a key event in the progression of malignant gliomas, a process involving endothelial cell proliferation, migration, reorganization of extracellular matrix and tube formation. Such processes are regulated by the homeostatic balance between proangiogenic and antiangiogenic factors, most notably vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGFs) produced by glioma cells. Current strategies targeting VEGF-VEGF receptor signal transduction pathways, though effective in normalizing abnormal tumor vasculature, eventually result in tumor resistance whereby a highly infiltrative and invasive phenotype may be adopted. Here we review recent anti-angiogenic therapy for malignant glioma and highlight implantable devices and nano/microparticles as next-generation methods for chemotherapeutic delivery. Intrinsic and adaptive modes of glioma resistance to anti-angiogenic therapy will be discussed with particular focus on the glioma stem cell paradigm.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20414333 PMCID: PMC2855058 DOI: 10.1155/2010/251231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Anti-angiogenic agents trialled in high-grade glioma and their respective targets.
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| Bevacizumab | Free VEGF-A |
| IMC-3G3 | PDGFR alpha |
| Ramucirumab | VEGFR-2 |
| Nimotuzumab | EGFR |
| AMG-102 | Hepatocyte Growth Factor |
| VEGF-trap | Decoy receptor for VEGF |
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| Cediranib | VEGFR/PDGFR/c-Kit |
| Sorafenib | VEGFR/PDGFR/c-Kit/Raf |
| Sunitinib | VEGFR/PDGFR |
| AE788 | EGFR/VEGFR |
| Erlotinib | EGFR |
| Imatinib | PDGFR/Bcr-abl/c-Kit |
| Dasatanib | Src kinases |
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| Enzastaurin | Protein Kinase C |
| Rapamycin/Temsirolimus | mTOR |
| Tipifarnib | Ras |
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| Thalidomide/Lenalidomide | NO/TNF alpha/IL-6 |
| Celecoxib | Endostatin |
| Cilengitide | Integrins |
| 2-methoxyestradiol | HIF1 |
| Prinomastat | MMPs 2,9,13 and 14 |
| SAHA(Vorinostat) | Histone deacetylase |
Figure 1Mechanisms of glioma resistance to anti-angiogenic therapeutic modalities. (Top) Adaptive (evasive) resistance. After an initial transitory response phase, the tumor switches to mechanisms that induce neovascularization and renewed tumor growth and progression, thereby evading therapeutic blockade. These consist of pro-angiogenic factor substitution (typically dependence on FGF and angiopoietin signalling in cases of VEGF blockade), recruitment of endothelial cells and pericytes from the bon-marrow, protection of existing tumor blood vessels via increased pericyte coverage and increased tumor cell invasiveness whereby tumor cells invade adjacent normal tissue to achieve vascular sufficiency. (Bottom) Intrinsic (cellular) resistance. From the outset, some gliomas are nonresponsive to angiogenesis blockade. This may be accounted for by the preexistence of multiple redundant pro-angiogenic signals, which would allow for continued angiogenesis during anti-angiogenic insults. In addition, glioma stem cells (GSCs) (green circles) have been identified as key mediators of glioma angiogenesis and may share intrinsic cell survival and lifespan prolonging characteristics with normal tissue stem cells. Specifically, GSCs may reside in a noncycling quiescent state, thus blocking entry of drugs through the tumor cell membrane and may express relatively high levels of ABC-drug transporters, enabling a multi-drug resistance phenotype via efflux of drugs from the tumor cell. Red lines, tumor blood vessels.