Anti-angiogenic Therapy in Pediatric Neuro-oncology

被引:0
作者
Mark W. Kieran
机构
[1] Harvard Medical School,Pediatric Medical Neuro
[2] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Children’s Hospital Boston,Oncology
来源
Journal of Neuro-Oncology | 2005年 / 75卷
关键词
angiogenesis; anti-angiogenesis; biologic therapy; brain tumor; pediatric; VEGF;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In order to grow, tissues require additional nutrients and oxygen as well as removal of waste products. Tumors achieve this by up-regulating angiogenic cytokines and/or down-regulating natural inhibitory proteins that allow neovascularization to proceed. Brain tumors continue to account for significant morbidity and mortality, in spite of significant advances in neurosurgical and radiation techniques and new chemotherapy combinations. As such, there is a real and immediate need for novel biologic therapies that can target these tumors. A number of new drugs that target different aspects of the angiogenic cascade have been identified and are now in clinical trials in children with primary brain tumors. In many of these pre-clinical and clinical studies, anti-angiogenic therapy has been well tolerated, has lacked many of the traditional toxicities of radiation and chemotherapy, does not require blood–brain barrier penetration, and targets a critical pathway in central nervous system tumor development. This review will discuss what angiogenesis is, how pediatric brain tumors regulate angiogenesis to obtain a vascular supply, what types of inhibitors are available, how different classes of inhibitors work, the types of resistance possible, how rapidly these inhibitors may work, and what surrogate markers of activity are available to follow response.
引用
收藏
页码:327 / 334
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Anti-angiogenic therapy in pediatric neuro-oncology
    Kieran, MW
    JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2005, 75 (03) : 327 - 334
  • [2] Anti-Angiogenic Cancer Therapy Updates
    Ali, A. M.
    Toi, M.
    Ueno, T.
    CURRENT MOLECULAR MEDICINE, 2009, 9 (08) : 954 - 966
  • [3] Future options of anti-angiogenic cancer therapy
    Cao, Yihai
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2016, 35
  • [4] Autophagy as a mechanism for anti-angiogenic therapy resistance
    Chandra, Ankush
    Rick, Jonathan
    Yagnik, Garima
    Aghi, Manish K.
    SEMINARS IN CANCER BIOLOGY, 2020, 66 : 75 - 88
  • [5] Evading anti-angiogenic therapy: resistance to anti-angiogenic therapy in solid tumors
    Dey, Nandini
    De, Pradip
    Brian, Leyland-Jones
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH, 2015, 7 (10): : 1675 - 1698
  • [6] Tumor angiogenesis and anti-angiogenic therapy
    Guo, Ziheng
    Jing, Xu
    Sun, Xiaoting
    Sun, Shishuo
    Yang, Yunlong
    Cao, Yihai
    CHINESE MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2024, 137 (17) : 2043 - 2051
  • [7] Anti-angiogenic therapy in breast cancer
    Rahman, MA
    Toi, M
    BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2003, 57 (10) : 463 - 470
  • [8] Anti-angiogenic therapy for gastrointestinal tumours
    Graepler, F
    Gregor, M
    Lauer, UM
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR GASTROENTEROLOGIE, 2005, 43 (03): : 317 - 329
  • [9] Anti-angiogenic Therapy: Concept to Clinic
    Young, Robin J.
    Reed, Malcolm W. R.
    MICROCIRCULATION, 2012, 19 (02) : 115 - 125
  • [10] Anti-angiogenic therapy in pediatric brain tumors: An effective strategy?
    Sie, Mariska
    den Dunnen, Wilfred F. A.
    Hoving, Eelco W.
    de Bont, Eveline S. J. M.
    CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ONCOLOGY HEMATOLOGY, 2014, 89 (03) : 418 - 432