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Antiangiogenic scheduling of chemotherapy improves efficacy against experimental drug-resistant cancer.
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45
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2000
Year
Tumor BiologyChemoprevention StrategyMedicineAntiangiogenic SchedulingTumor GrowthPharmacologyPathologyAnti-cancer AgentEndothelial Cell ApoptosisCancer TreatmentMetronomic ChemotherapyOncologyCancer ChemotherapyTumor MicroenvironmentLung CancerCancer ResearchDrug Resistance
The study develops an alternative cyclophosphamide schedule to exploit its antiangiogenic potential. The schedule induces repeated endothelial cell apoptosis in tumors, which precedes tumor cell death. The antiangiogenic schedule prevented resistance, eradicated Lewis lung carcinoma and L1210 leukemia, suppressed drug‑resistant tumor growth threefold versus conventional therapy, and eliminated resistant tumors in p53‑null mice, especially when combined with TNP‑470.
To reveal the antiangiogenic capability of cancer chemotherapy, we developed an alternative antiangiogenic schedule for administration of cyclophosphamide. We show here that this antiangiogenic schedule avoided drug resistance and eradicated Lewis lung carcinoma and L1210 leukemia, an outcome not possible with the conventional schedule. When Lewis lung carcinoma and EMT-6 breast cancer were made drug resistant before therapy, the antiangiogenic schedule suppressed tumor growth 3-fold more effectively than the conventional schedule. When another angiogenesis inhibitor, TNP-470, was added to the antiangiogenic schedule of cyclophosphamide, drug-resistant Lewis lung carcinomas were eradicated. Each dose of the antiangiogenic schedule of cyclophosphamide induced the apoptosis of endothelial cells within tumors, and endothelial cell apoptosis preceded the apoptosis of drug-resistant tumor cells. This antiangiogenic effect was more pronounced in p53-null mice in which the apoptosis of p53-null endothelial cells induced by cyclophosphamide was so vigorous that drug-resistant tumors comprising 4.5% of body weight were eradicated. Thus, by using a dosing schedule of cyclophosphamide that provided more sustained apoptosis of endothelial cells within the vascular bed of a tumor, we show that a chemotherapeutic agent can more effectively control tumor growth in mice, regardless of whether the tumor cells are drug resistant.
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