Press Release
Identification of signature genes associated with therapeutic resistance to anti-VEGF therapy
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2020-01-07
To establish a molecular signature of this resistance in ovarian cancer, the authors developed preclinical tumor models of adaptive resistance to chronic anti-VEGF treatment.
These findings link signature gene expressions with anti-VEGF response, and may thus provide novel targetable mechanisms of clinical resistance to anti-VEGF therapies.
Dr. Sukyung Woo from the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA as well as the Gynecologic Cancers Research Program, Peggy and Charles Stephenson Cancer Center, the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA said, "Ovarian cancer is the principal cause of gynecological-cancer-related deaths in women in the United States"
Increased tumor angiogenesis in ovarian cancer is also critical to ovarian cancer metastasis and ascites development.
Several studies have shown that a high level of vascular endothelial growth factor, a key regulator of tumor angiogenesis, is associated with poor prognosis in patients with ovarian cancer.
In the present study, the scientists developed preclinical xenograft models of ovarian cancer that acquire adaptive resistance to anti-VEGF therapeutics.
Using these tumors, they utilized unbiased approaches to identify not only a distinct gene signature associated with resistance development, but also the source of resistance.
The Woo Research Team concluded, "we have used in vivo tumor models that gain adaptive resistance to VEGF-targeting therapeutics to discover a unique molecular signature associated with the anti-VEGF resistance phenotype. These pathways may function as important alternative angiogenic signaling pathways in the presence of VEGF blockade. The present study has thus paved the way for the development of new combination or sequential treatment strategies that may help to counteract the resistance mechanisms."
Full text - https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27307
Correspondence to - Sukyung Woo - sukyung-woo@ouhsc.edu
Keywords - anti-VEGF resistance, angiogenesis, bevacizumab, next-generation sequencing (NGS), apelin
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