Hudis Clifford A
Breast Cancer Medicine Service, Solid Tumor Division, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Oncology (Williston Park). 2005 Apr;19(4 Suppl 3):26-31.
The improved survival associated with adding the anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) monoclonal antibody bevacizumab (Avastin) to chemotherapy for the treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer demonstrates the importance of targeting collateral cells involved in tumor growth, progression, and metastatic spread. Based on the Gompertzian model of tumor growth, adding anti-VEGF agents to standard chemotherapy may be especially effective in early stages of cancer. By improving chemotherapy delivery to the tumor and inhibiting regrowth between treatment cycles, anti-VEGF agents may alter the growth pattern of a tumor such that it is more susceptible to eradication. These concepts also suggest that anti-VEGF agents could enhance the effectiveness of chemotherapy given conventionally or in a dose-dense fashion. As such, it is possible that the effectiveness of chemotherapy could be maintained or improved, even at lower cumulative doses, which may improve its tolerability. Additionally, the effects of anti-VEGF agents on metronomic chemotherapy, which is reported to have antiangiogenic properties on its own, warrant further evaluation. Preclinical data demonstrate that cytostatic angiogenesis inhibitors are potent complementary agents to metronomic chemotherapy, producing sustained complete regressions in some models of human cancer. Dose-dense and metronomic chemotherapy have in common a shortened dosing interval and resultant increased and/or prolonged exposure of tumor cells to chemotherapy in vivo. Optimizing the use of anti-VEGF agents in the clinic demands further investigation of the most appropriate way to combine them with chemotherapy, particularly regimens designed to exploit known tumor growth patterns and those designed to target the endothelial cells involved in neovascularization with multiple agents.
在转移性结直肠癌患者的治疗中,将抗血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)单克隆抗体贝伐单抗(阿瓦斯汀)添加到化疗中可提高生存率,这表明靶向参与肿瘤生长、进展和转移扩散的旁系细胞具有重要意义。基于肿瘤生长的戈姆珀茨模型,在癌症早期添加抗VEGF药物可能特别有效。通过改善化疗药物向肿瘤的递送并抑制治疗周期之间的肿瘤再生长,抗VEGF药物可能会改变肿瘤的生长模式,使其更易于被根除。这些概念还表明,抗VEGF药物可以增强传统给药或剂量密集给药方式的化疗效果。因此,即使在较低的累积剂量下,化疗效果也有可能得以维持或改善,这可能会提高其耐受性。此外,抗VEGF药物对节拍化疗的影响值得进一步评估,据报道节拍化疗本身具有抗血管生成特性。临床前数据表明,细胞周期抑制性血管生成抑制剂是节拍化疗的有效补充药物,在一些人类癌症模型中可产生持续的完全缓解。剂量密集化疗和节拍化疗的共同之处在于给药间隔缩短,从而使肿瘤细胞在体内接受化疗的时间增加和/或延长。在临床上优化抗VEGF药物的使用需要进一步研究将它们与化疗联合使用的最合适方法,特别是那些旨在利用已知肿瘤生长模式的方案以及那些旨在用多种药物靶向参与新生血管形成的内皮细胞的方案。