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Neoadjuvant antiangiogenic therapy reveals contrasts in primary and metastatic tumor efficacy
Author(s) -
Ebos John ML,
Mastri Michalis,
Lee Christina R,
Tracz Amanda,
Hudson John M,
Attwood Kristopher,
CruzMunoz William R,
Jedeszko Christopher,
Burns Peter,
Kerbel Robert S
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
embo molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.923
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1757-4684
pISSN - 1757-4676
DOI - 10.15252/emmm.201403989
Subject(s) - medicine , neoadjuvant therapy , oncology , occult , primary tumor , breast cancer , chemotherapy , melanoma , disease , metastasis , systemic therapy , clinical trial , cancer , pathology , cancer research , alternative medicine
Thousands of cancer patients are currently in clinical trials evaluating antiangiogenic therapy in the neoadjuvant setting, which is the treatment of localized primary tumors prior to surgical intervention. The rationale is that shrinking a tumor will improve surgical outcomes and minimize growth of occult micrometastatic disease—thus delaying post‐surgical recurrence and improving survival. But approved VEGF pathway inhibitors have not been tested in clinically relevant neoadjuvant models that compare pre‐ and post‐surgical treatment effects. Using mouse models of breast, kidney, and melanoma metastasis, we demonstrate that primary tumor responses to neoadjuvant VEGFR TKI treatment do not consistently correlate with improved post‐surgical survival, with survival worsened in certain settings. Similar negative effects did not extend to protein‐based VEGF pathway inhibitors and could be reversed with altered dose, surgical timing, and treatment duration, or when VEGFR TKI s are combined with metronomic ‘anti‐metastatic’ chemotherapy regimens. These studies represent the first attempt to recapitulate the complex clinical parameters of neoadjuvant therapy in mice and identify a novel tool to compare systemic antiangiogenic treatment effects on localized and disseminated disease.

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