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Antineoplastic effects of chemotherapeutic agents are potentiated by NM-3, an inhibitor of angiogenesis.
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Citations
24
References
2002
Year
Chemotherapeutic AgentsAntineoplastic EffectsOncologyAngiogenesisAngiogenesis InhibitorsAngiogenesis InhibitorMedicineVascular BiologyTumor TargetingAnti-cancer AgentNeovascularizationPharmacologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor MicroenvironmentTumor BiologyCancer GrowthAntiangiogenic Therapy
Antiangiogenic therapy, although effective in shrinking tumors, has not yet been established as a standalone treatment for cancer. This therapeutic limitation can be overcome by combining angiogenesis inhibitors with chemotherapeutic agents. NM-3, a small molecule isocoumarin, is a recently discovered angiogenesis inhibitor. Here we demonstrate that NM-3 inhibits the proliferation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro, at concentrations 10-fold less than those required to inhibit normal fibroblasts or tumor cells (HT29, MKN28, and MCF-7). NM-3 alone inhibits endothelial sprouting and tube formation in vitro. The results also show that synergistic antiproliferative activity is observed when human umbilical vein endothelial cells are treated with NM-3 in combination with 5-fluorouracil. The effects of treatment with NM-3 and various chemotherapeutic agents were also evaluated in tumor xenografts. The results demonstrate that combined treatment with NM-3 and chemotherapeutic agents significantly reduced mean tumor volume compared with either treatment alone, with no effects on body weight changes. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that NM-3 is a well-tolerated angiogenesis inhibitor that significantly increases the efficacy of existing antineoplastic agents.
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