| Literature DB >> 33383154 |
Su Zhang1, Manqing Cao2, Zhenyu Hou1, Xiaoying Gu1, Yongzi Chen3, Lu Chen1, Yi Luo3, Liwei Chen3, Dongming Liu1, Hongyuan Zhou1, Keyun Zhu1, Zhiwei Wang1, Xihao Zhang1, Xiaolin Zhu1, Yunlong Cui1, Huikai Li4, Hua Guo5, Ti Zhang6.
Abstract
At present, anti-angiogenic drugs (AADs) are widely used in the systemic treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) or other types of cancer, and have achieved good anti-cancer effect, whereas treatment-related proteinuria can affect the routine use of AADs, which in turn abates the overall efficacy. Currently, most clinicians prescribe angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) to alleviate proteinuria according to diabetic nephropathy guidelines or expert recommendations. However, the efficacy of ACEIs in reducing AAD-related proteinuria and its effect on the anticancer effect of AADs is unknown. Our clinical data showed that some HCC patients experienced tumor progression by ACEIs administration for the treatment of proteinuria caused by AADs. Here, we confirmed that in different tumor-bearing mouse models, ACEIs did not delay the appearance of proteinuria or alleviate proteinuria caused by AADs but compromised the anticancer efficacy of AADs. This effect is unrelated to the change in the VEGF signaling pathway. Our data showed that the combination of ACEIs and AADs flared the production of kidney-derived erythropoietin (EPO). In turn, EPO compromises the anti-angiogenic effects of AADs and decreases antitumor activity. In conclusion, for the treatment of proteinuria caused by AADs, ACEIs have no efficacy while also promoting AADs resistance. This finding is of great significance to guide clinical standardized management of side effects of anti-angiogenic therapy for cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: ACEIs; Anti-angiogenic drugs; Erythropoietin; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Proteinuria
Year: 2020 PMID: 33383154 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2020.12.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679