| Literature DB >> 26852677 |
Abstract
In recent years, studies using ultrasound energy for cancer treatment have advanced, thus revealing the enhancement of drug effects by employing low-intensity ultrasound. Furthermore, anti-angiogenesis against tumors is now attracting attention as a new cancer treatment. Therefore, we focused on the biological effects and the enhancement of drug effects brought by this low-intensity ultrasound energy and reported on the efficacy against a uterine sarcoma model, by implementing the basic studies, for the first time, including the concomitant use of low-intensity ultrasound irradiation, as an expected new antiangiogenic therapy for cancer treatment. Furthermore, we have succeeded in simultaneously utilizing low-intensity ultrasound in both diagnosis and treatment, upon real time evaluation of the anti-tumor effects and anti-angiogenesis effects using color Doppler ultrasound imaging. Although the biological effects of ultrasound have not yet been completely clarified, transient stomas were formed (Sonoporation) in cancer cells irradiated by low-intensity ultrasound and it is believed that the penetration effect of drugs is enhanced due to the drug being more charged inside the cell through these stomas. Furthermore, it has become clear that the concomitant therapy of anti-angiogenesis drugs and low-intensity ultrasound blocks the angiogenic factor VEGF produced by cancer cells, inhibits the induction of circulating endothelial progenitor cells in the bone marrow, and expedites angiogenic inhibitor TSP-1. Based on research achievements in recent years, we predict that the current diagnostic device for color Doppler ultrasound imaging will be improved in the near future, bringing with it the arrival of an age of "low-intensity ultrasound treatment that simultaneously enables diagnosis and treatment of cancer in real time."Entities:
Keywords: Sonoporation; VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor); anti-angiogenic therapy; circulating endothelial cells; color Doppler ultrasound; low-intensity ultrasound; metronomic chemotherapy; tumor angiogenesis; ultrasound therapy; uterine sarcoma
Year: 2014 PMID: 26852677 PMCID: PMC4665543 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics4020047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1A figure showing a suppression experiment of angiogenesis by ultrasound, designed by the author et al. Irradiate ultrasound (using Sonitoron2000: Richmar, USA) per each 1 well under low-output conditions in the state in which human umbilical vascular endothelial cells (HUVEC) and human skin fibroblasts were co-cultivated (KURABO, Japan).
Figure 2Potential blood flow (angiogenesis) of malignant tumors is enhanced and extracted using color Doppler ultrasound imaging. This picture is a clinical case of uterine sarcoma, using Levovist. Because uterine sarcomas have the most aggressive angiogenesis among all uterine cancers, they are used as a model for angiogenesis.
Figure 3Evaluation of the intratumoral blood flow (angiogenesis) and expression of VEGF by color Doppler imaging: the concomitant therapy of CPT-11 and ultrasonic irradiation causes shrinkage of the tumor volume and significant decrease in intratumoral blood flow, as well as a slight reduction of VEGF.