R J Young1, P J Woll, C A Staton, M W R Reed, N J Brown. 1. Microcirculation Research Group, Academic Unit of Surgical Oncology, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, S10 2RX, UK, r.j.young@sheffield.ac.uk.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Angiosarcomas are rare, aggressive vascular tumours known to express vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a key pro-angiogenic growth factor. The aim of this study was to determine the potential effects of vascular-targeted agents for the treatment of angiosarcoma, using two human cutaneous angiosarcoma cell lines (ASM and ISO-HAS), and human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HuDMECs) for comparison. METHODS: Protein arrays were used to assess the expression of angiogenesis-related proteins, and potential drug targets were assessed by ELISA and Western blotting. Response to vascular-targeted agents, including bevacizumab an anti-VEGF antibody, axitinib a VEGF-receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor, everolimus an mTOR inhibitor, selumetinib a MEK inhibitor and vadimezan a vascular-disrupting agent were compared in functional in vitro cellular assays, including viability, differentiation and migration assays. RESULTS: ASM and ISO-HAS cells expressed a broad range of pro-angiogenic growth factors. ASM and ISO-HAS VEGF expression was significantly increased (p = 0.029) compared with HuDMECs. Striking responses were seen to vadimezan with an IC50 of 90 and 150 μg/ml for ASM and ISO-HAS cells, respectively. Selumetinib inhibited ASM with an IC50 of 1,750 ng/ml, but was not effective in ISO-HAS. Everolimus reduced both ASM and ISO-HAS viable cell counts by 20 % (p < 0.001). Minimal responses were observed to bevacizumab and axitinib in assays with ASM and ISO-HAS cells. CONCLUSIONS: Further studies are warranted to investigate mTOR inhibitors, MEK inhibitors and vascular-disrupting agents for the treatment of angiosarcoma.
PURPOSE:Angiosarcomas are rare, aggressive vascular tumours known to express vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a key pro-angiogenic growth factor. The aim of this study was to determine the potential effects of vascular-targeted agents for the treatment of angiosarcoma, using two human cutaneous angiosarcoma cell lines (ASM and ISO-HAS), and human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HuDMECs) for comparison. METHODS: Protein arrays were used to assess the expression of angiogenesis-related proteins, and potential drug targets were assessed by ELISA and Western blotting. Response to vascular-targeted agents, including bevacizumab an anti-VEGF antibody, axitinib a VEGF-receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor, everolimus an mTOR inhibitor, selumetinib a MEK inhibitor and vadimezan a vascular-disrupting agent were compared in functional in vitro cellular assays, including viability, differentiation and migration assays. RESULTS:ASM and ISO-HAS cells expressed a broad range of pro-angiogenic growth factors. ASM and ISO-HASVEGF expression was significantly increased (p = 0.029) compared with HuDMECs. Striking responses were seen to vadimezan with an IC50 of 90 and 150 μg/ml for ASM and ISO-HAS cells, respectively. Selumetinib inhibited ASM with an IC50 of 1,750 ng/ml, but was not effective in ISO-HAS. Everolimus reduced both ASM and ISO-HAS viable cell counts by 20 % (p < 0.001). Minimal responses were observed to bevacizumab and axitinib in assays with ASM and ISO-HAS cells. CONCLUSIONS: Further studies are warranted to investigate mTOR inhibitors, MEK inhibitors and vascular-disrupting agents for the treatment of angiosarcoma.
Authors: Anastasia Constantinidou; Nicolas Sauve; Silvia Stacchiotti; Jean-Yves Blay; Bruno Vincenzi; Giovanni Grignani; Piotr Rutkowski; Michele Guida; Nadia Hindi; Alexander Klein; Valentin Thibaud; Jozef Sufliarsky; Ingrid Desar; Neeltje Steeghs; Saskia Litiere; Hans Gelderblom; Robin L Jones Journal: ESMO Open Date: 2020-08