Thalidomide is an inhibitor of angiogenesis.

Robert J. D’Amato(Boston Children's Hospital), Michael Loughnan(Boston Children's Hospital), Evelyn Flynn(Boston Children's Hospital), Judah Folkman(Boston Children's Hospital)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 26, 1994
Cited by 2,463Open Access

Abstract

Thalidomide is a potent teratogen causing dysmelia (stunted limb growth) in humans. We have demonstrated that orally administered thalidomide is an inhibitor of angiogenesis induced by basic fibroblast growth factor in a rabbit cornea micropocket assay. Experiments including the analysis of thalidomide analogs revealed that the antiangiogenic activity correlated with the teratogenicity but not with the sedative or the mild immunosuppressive properties of thalidomide. Electron microscopic examination of the corneal neovascularization of thalidomide-treated rabbits revealed specific ultrastructural changes similar to those seen in the deformed limb bud vasculature of thalidomide-treated embryos. These experiments shed light on the mechanism of thalidomide's teratogenicity and hold promise for the potential use of thalidomide as an orally administered drug for the treatment of many diverse diseases dependent on angiogenesis.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis