Anti-VEGF Antibody Treatment of Glioblastoma Prolongs Survival But Results in Increased Vascular Cooption

James L. Rubenstein(University of California, San Francisco), Jin Kim(University of California, San Francisco), Tomoko Ozawa(Genentech), Michael Zhang(Neurological Surgery), Manfred Westphal(University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf), Dennis F. Deen(Neurological Surgery), Marc A. Shuman(University of California, San Francisco)
Neoplasia
July 1, 2000
Cited by 509Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an important mediator of the intense angiogenesis which is characteristic of glioblastoma. While genetic manipulation of VEGF/VEGF receptor expression has previously been shown to inhibit glioblastoma growth, to date, no study has examined the efficacy of pharmacologic blockade of VEGF activity as a means to inhibit intracranial growth of human glioblastoma. Using intraperitoneal administration of a neutralizing anti-VEGF antibody, we demonstrate that inhibition of VEGF significantly prolongs survival in athymic rats inoculated in the basal ganglia with G55 human glioblastoma cells. Systemic anti-VEGF inhibition causes decreased tumor vascularity as well as a marked increase in tumor cell apoptosis in intracranial tumors. Although intracranial glioblastoma tumors grow more slowly as a consequence of anti-VEGF treatment, the histologic pattern of growth suggests that these tumors adapt to inhibition of angiogenesis by increased infiltration and cooption of the host vasculature.


Related Papers