Lamszus K, Kunkel P, Westphal M
Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Acta Neurochir Suppl. 2003;88:169-77. doi: 10.1007/978-3-7091-6090-9_23.
The inhibition of tumor angiogenesis could be an efficient therapeutic strategy for the treatment of malignant gliomas. Prominent neovascularization is induced by these tumors, and microvascular proliferation is a malignancy grading criterion. However, glioma cells can also invade the brain diffusely over long distances without necessarily requiring angiogenesis. Experimentally, it was shown that especially during early stages of growth in rodent brain, glioma cells can coopt the preexistent host vasculature to recruit their blood supply in the absence of neovascularization. This phenomenon was only observed in orthotopic models in which the tumor cells were implanted into the brain which is a densely vascularized environment, but not in subcutaneous models in which tumor cells are implanted into a virtual space. Using an orthotopic mouse model, we analyzed whether systemic anti-angiogenic therapy with an antibody against the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 (VEGFR-2) could inhibit intracerebral growth of xenografted human glioblastoma cells and what effect this treatment had on tumor morphology and invasiveness. We found that anti-angiogenic therapy inhibited tumor growth by 80% compared to buffer-treated controls. The intratumoral microvessel density was reduced by at least 40% in treated animals compared to controls. However, in mice treated with the anti-VEGFR-2 antibody, we noticed a striking increase in the number and total area of small satellite tumors clustered around the primary mass. These satellites usually contained central vessel cores, and tumor cells often had migrated along blood vessels over long distances to eventually reach the surface and spread in the subarachnoid space. Systemic anti-angiogenic therapy can thus apparently increase the invasiveness of gliomas in the orthotopic model. Tumor cell invasion was tightly associated with preexistent blood vessels, suggesting that increased cooption of the host vasculature could represent a compensatory mechanism that is selected for by inhibiting adequate tumor vascularization.
抑制肿瘤血管生成可能是治疗恶性胶质瘤的一种有效治疗策略。这些肿瘤会诱导显著的新血管形成,微血管增殖是恶性程度分级标准。然而,胶质瘤细胞也可以在不依赖血管生成的情况下远距离弥漫性侵入大脑。实验表明,特别是在啮齿动物脑内生长的早期阶段,胶质瘤细胞可以在没有新血管形成的情况下利用预先存在的宿主血管来获取血液供应。这种现象仅在将肿瘤细胞植入血管密集的脑内的原位模型中观察到,而在将肿瘤细胞植入虚拟空间的皮下模型中未观察到。使用原位小鼠模型,我们分析了用抗血管内皮生长因子受体2(VEGFR-2)抗体进行全身抗血管生成治疗是否能抑制异种移植的人胶质母细胞瘤细胞在脑内的生长,以及这种治疗对肿瘤形态和侵袭性有何影响。我们发现,与缓冲液处理的对照组相比,抗血管生成治疗使肿瘤生长抑制了80%。与对照组相比,治疗动物的肿瘤内微血管密度至少降低了40%。然而,在用抗VEGFR-2抗体治疗的小鼠中,我们注意到围绕原发肿块聚集的小卫星肿瘤的数量和总面积显著增加。这些卫星肿瘤通常含有中央血管核心,肿瘤细胞常常沿着血管远距离迁移,最终到达表面并在蛛网膜下腔扩散。因此,在原位模型中,全身抗血管生成治疗显然会增加胶质瘤的侵袭性。肿瘤细胞侵袭与预先存在的血管密切相关,这表明增加对宿主血管的利用可能代表一种通过抑制充分的肿瘤血管生成而被选择的补偿机制。