Angiogenesis in brain tumours

RK Jain, E Di Tomaso, DG Duda, JS Loeffler… - Nature Reviews …, 2007 - nature.com
RK Jain, E Di Tomaso, DG Duda, JS Loeffler, AG Sorensen, TT Batchelor
Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2007nature.com
Despite aggressive surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, malignant gliomas remain
uniformly fatal. To progress, these tumours stimulate the formation of new blood vessels
through processes driven primarily by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). However,
the resulting vessels are structurally and functionally abnormal, and contribute to a hostile
microenvironment (low oxygen tension and high interstitial fluid pressure) that selects for a
more malignant phenotype with increased morbidity and mortality. Emerging preclinical and …
Abstract
Despite aggressive surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, malignant gliomas remain uniformly fatal. To progress, these tumours stimulate the formation of new blood vessels through processes driven primarily by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). However, the resulting vessels are structurally and functionally abnormal, and contribute to a hostile microenvironment (low oxygen tension and high interstitial fluid pressure) that selects for a more malignant phenotype with increased morbidity and mortality. Emerging preclinical and clinical data indicate that anti-VEGF therapies are potentially effective in glioblastoma — the most frequent primary brain tumour — and can transiently normalize tumour vessels. This creates a window of opportunity for optimally combining chemotherapeutics and radiation.
nature.com