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Discontinuation of anti-VEGF cancer therapy promotes metastasis through a liver revascularization mechanism
Author(s) -
Yunlong Yang,
Yin Zhang,
Hideki Iwamoto,
Kayoko Hosaka,
Takahiro Seki,
Patrik Andersson,
Sharon Lim,
Carina Fischer,
Masaki Nakamura,
Mitsuhiko Abe,
Renhai Cao,
Peter Vilhelm Skov,
Fang Chen,
Xiaoyun Chen,
Yongtian Lu,
Guohui Nie,
Yihai Cao
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
nature communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.559
H-Index - 365
ISSN - 2041-1723
DOI - 10.1038/ncomms12680
Subject(s) - intravasation , sunitinib , metastasis , extravasation , medicine , discontinuation , cancer research , cancer , cancer cell , vascular endothelial growth factor , vegf receptors , pathology
The impact of discontinuation of anti-VEGF cancer therapy in promoting cancer metastasis is unknown. Here we show discontinuation of anti-VEGF treatment creates a time-window of profound structural changes of liver sinusoidal vasculatures, exhibiting hyper-permeability and enlarged open-pore sizes of the fenestrated endothelium and loss of VE-cadherin. The drug cessation caused highly leaky hepatic vasculatures permit tumour cell intravasation and extravasation. Discontinuation of an anti-VEGF antibody-based drug and sunitinib markedly promotes liver metastasis. Mechanistically, host hepatocyte, but not tumour cell-derived vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), is responsible for cancer metastasis. Deletion of hepatocyte VEGF markedly ablates the ‘off-drug'-induced metastasis. These findings provide mechanistic insights on anti-VEGF cessation-induced metastasis and raise a new challenge for uninterrupted and sustained antiangiogenic therapy for treatment of human cancers.

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