Open Access
Everolimus affects vasculogenic mimicry in renal carcinoma resistant to sunitinib
Author(s) -
Maria Serova,
Annemilaï TijerasRaballand,
Célia Dos Santos,
M Martinet,
Cindy Neuzillet,
Alfred Lopez,
Donald E. Mitchell,
Brad Allen Bryan,
Guillaume Gapihan,
Anne Janin,
Guilhem Bousquet,
María E. Riveiro,
Ivan Bièche,
Sandrine Faivre,
Éric Raymond,
Armand de Gramont
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
oncotarget
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.373
H-Index - 127
ISSN - 1949-2553
DOI - 10.18632/oncotarget.9542
Subject(s) - sunitinib , medicine , renal cell carcinoma , clear cell renal cell carcinoma , everolimus , oncology
Angiogenesis is hallmark of clear cell renal cell carcinogenesis. Anti-angiogenic therapies have been successful in improving disease outcome; however, most patients treated with anti-angiogenic agents will eventually progress. In this study we report that clear cell renal cell carcinoma was associated with vasculogenic mimicry in both mice and human with tumor cells expressing endothelial markers in the vicinity of tumor vessels. We show that vasculogenic mimicry was efficiently targeted by sunitinib but eventually associated with tumor resistance and a more aggressive phenotype both in vitro and in vivo. Re-challenging these resistant tumors in mice, we showed that second-line treatment with everolimus particularly affected vasculogenic mimicry and tumor cell differentiation compared to sorafenib and axitinib. Finally, our results highlighted the phenotypic and genotypic changes at the tumor cell and microenvironment levels during sunitinib response and progression and the subsequent improvement second-line therapies bring to the current renal cell carcinoma treatment paradigm.