Study Reveals How Breast Cancer Spreads to Lymph Nodes.


A recent study offers new insights into how breast cancer may spread to nearby lymph nodes and also suggests that a drug commonly used to treat heart failure, digoxin, may be able to interrupt the process. The findings were reported September 10 in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences (PNAS).

The lymphatic system is an important route through which cancer cells reach the circulatory system and travel to distant organs, where they develop into metastatic tumors. Metastasis—which is responsible for most cancer deaths—is not well understood, and few treatments actively target it. In breast cancer, nearly all women with metastatic disease have lymph node involvement.

Using mice, Dr. Gregg Semenza of Johns Hopkins University and his colleagues showed that hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1α) plays a direct role in the spread of breast cancer cells to the lymph nodes. HIF-1 α is a subunit of the HIF-1 protein, which promotes blood vessel formation under low-oxygen conditions, such as those in tumors. HIF-1α, the researchers found, activates the PDGF-B gene, which codes for platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF-B).

When mice with tumors formed from injected human breast cancer cells were treated with digoxin (which inhibits HIF-1α) or with imatinib (Gleevec; which inhibits PDGF-B), cancer cell spread was dramatically reduced.

In addition, mice with tumors formed from breast cancer cells that were genetically modified to block production of HIF-1α had 75 percent fewer lymph node metastases than mice with tumors formed from unmodified breast cancer cells.

In biopsy samples from human breast cancers, the authors also found that

  • PDGF-B was highly active in cells that were starved of oxygen,
  • HIF-1α directly activated transcription of PDGF-B,
  • the HIF-1α and PDGF-B proteins were found near each other in almost all of the biopsy samples they studied, and
  • levels of expression of these proteins in biopsy samples correlated with tumor grade.

Other studies have linked HIF-1α and PDGF-B to metastatic spread. “But this is the first time that anybody has connected all the dots in a single cancer,” Dr. Semenza explained.

Later this year, the Hopkins researchers plan to launch an early-phase clinical trial to test digoxin in women with operable breast cancer, Dr. Semenza said. Digoxin, an off-patent drug, will be given for about 2 weeks before surgery, and the researchers will analyze pre- and post-surgical tumor samples to determine whether the drug is inhibiting HIF-1 and its downstream target genes.

If the trial suggests that the drug is having the intended molecular effects, an early-phase trial combining digoxin with other standard treatments would likely be launched.

Source: NCI

 

 

 

Assessment of antiangiogenic effect of imatinib mesylate on vestibular schwannoma tumors using in vivo corneal angiogenesis assay.


Angiogenesis and the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) pathway are active in the pathogenesis of vestibular schwannomas (VSs). The purpose of this study was to test whether imatinib mesylate (Gleevec), a PDGF receptor (PDGFR) blocker, reduces angiogenic capacity in sporadic VS and in VS associated with neurofibromatosis Type 2 (NF2) using a corneal angiogenesis assay.

Methods

From 121 VS tissue samples stored in the tumor bank at the Marmara University Institute of Neurological Sciences, 10 samples (6 from sporadic cases, 4 from NF2-associated cases) were selected at random for use in this study. Expression of PDGF-A and PDGF-B and their receptors was evaluated in sporadic and NF2-associated VS as well as in glioblastoma (GBM) and normal brain tissue by means of immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis. Corneal angiogenesis assay was then used to evaluate the angiogenic capacity of tissue specimens from sporadic and NF2-associated VS with and without imatinib treatment as well as positive and negative controls (GBM and normal brain tissue).

Results

The angiogenic potential of the sporadic and NF2-associated VS tumor tissue differed significantly from that of the positive and negative control tissues (p <0.05). Furthermore, NF2-associated VS showed significantly lower angiogenic potential than sporadic VS (p <0.05). Imatinib treatment significantly reduced the angiogenic potential in both the sporadic VS and the NF2-associated VS groups. The level of PDGF-A and PDGFR-α as well as PDGF-B and PDGFR-β expression in sporadic VS and NF2-associated VS also differed significantly (p <0.05) from the levels in controls. Additionally the level of PDGFR-β was significantly higher in sporadic VS than in NF2-associated VS (p <0.05).

Conclusions

The findings of this study indicate that NF2-associated VS has significantly more angiogenic potential than sporadic VS and normal brain tissue. Additionally, imatinib reduces the angiogenic activity of both sporadic and NF2-associated VS. The authors conclude that imatinib may be a potential treatment for VS, especially for NF2-associated lesions that cannot be cured with resection or radiosurgery.

Source: Journal of Neurosurgery.