Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 7-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Target-based anti-angiogenic therapy in breast cancer.

Target-based anti-angiogenic therapy in breast cancer. Breast cancer is the most common female cancer. Despite advances in prevention, early diagnosis, and surgical treatment, its prognosis is still poor. Therefore, immunological and pharmacological methods of treatment have been emphasized recently. Prominent targets of drugs or antibodies are proteins, which are predominantly expressed on breast cancer cells and are simultaneously involved in promoting cell growth or apoptosis. However, breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, because breast cancer cells may show a variety of malignant gene expression patterns. Therefore, it is difficult at the current state of technology, to apply the optimal cocktail of drugs to hit all cancer cells of any given patient. Under these circumstances, the option of targeting more tractable, normal cells surrounding the tumor instead of the less heterogeneous ones, preventing them from supporting tumor cell growth, became particularly interesting. Endothelial cells are important supporters of cancer cell growth. As a rule, tumors induce them to grow out and to develop a tumor vasculature, which enables the cancer cells to survive and to spread. The introduction of inhibitors of neovascularization was therefore an important milestone on the way toward treating breast cancer more successfully. It has already been demonstrated that the blockade of vascular endothelial growth results in regression of the disease and first clinical studies seemed to hint toward a beneficial effect on prolongation of survival. Nevertheless, more clinical and basic research is necessary to improve this therapy approach. This review will compile the knowledge about recently developed anti-angiogenic drugs in the treatment of breast cancer and will provide an overview on currently relevant clinical trials. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Current pharmaceutical design Pubmed

Target-based anti-angiogenic therapy in breast cancer.

Current pharmaceutical design , Volume 18 (27): -4186 – Mar 26, 2013

Target-based anti-angiogenic therapy in breast cancer.


Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common female cancer. Despite advances in prevention, early diagnosis, and surgical treatment, its prognosis is still poor. Therefore, immunological and pharmacological methods of treatment have been emphasized recently. Prominent targets of drugs or antibodies are proteins, which are predominantly expressed on breast cancer cells and are simultaneously involved in promoting cell growth or apoptosis. However, breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, because breast cancer cells may show a variety of malignant gene expression patterns. Therefore, it is difficult at the current state of technology, to apply the optimal cocktail of drugs to hit all cancer cells of any given patient. Under these circumstances, the option of targeting more tractable, normal cells surrounding the tumor instead of the less heterogeneous ones, preventing them from supporting tumor cell growth, became particularly interesting. Endothelial cells are important supporters of cancer cell growth. As a rule, tumors induce them to grow out and to develop a tumor vasculature, which enables the cancer cells to survive and to spread. The introduction of inhibitors of neovascularization was therefore an important milestone on the way toward treating breast cancer more successfully. It has already been demonstrated that the blockade of vascular endothelial growth results in regression of the disease and first clinical studies seemed to hint toward a beneficial effect on prolongation of survival. Nevertheless, more clinical and basic research is necessary to improve this therapy approach. This review will compile the knowledge about recently developed anti-angiogenic drugs in the treatment of breast cancer and will provide an overview on currently relevant clinical trials.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/pubmed/target-based-anti-angiogenic-therapy-in-breast-cancer-EkcMHrUQkY

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

ISSN
1381-6128
DOI
10.2174/138161212802430468
pmid
22632607

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common female cancer. Despite advances in prevention, early diagnosis, and surgical treatment, its prognosis is still poor. Therefore, immunological and pharmacological methods of treatment have been emphasized recently. Prominent targets of drugs or antibodies are proteins, which are predominantly expressed on breast cancer cells and are simultaneously involved in promoting cell growth or apoptosis. However, breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, because breast cancer cells may show a variety of malignant gene expression patterns. Therefore, it is difficult at the current state of technology, to apply the optimal cocktail of drugs to hit all cancer cells of any given patient. Under these circumstances, the option of targeting more tractable, normal cells surrounding the tumor instead of the less heterogeneous ones, preventing them from supporting tumor cell growth, became particularly interesting. Endothelial cells are important supporters of cancer cell growth. As a rule, tumors induce them to grow out and to develop a tumor vasculature, which enables the cancer cells to survive and to spread. The introduction of inhibitors of neovascularization was therefore an important milestone on the way toward treating breast cancer more successfully. It has already been demonstrated that the blockade of vascular endothelial growth results in regression of the disease and first clinical studies seemed to hint toward a beneficial effect on prolongation of survival. Nevertheless, more clinical and basic research is necessary to improve this therapy approach. This review will compile the knowledge about recently developed anti-angiogenic drugs in the treatment of breast cancer and will provide an overview on currently relevant clinical trials.

Journal

Current pharmaceutical designPubmed

Published: Mar 26, 2013

There are no references for this article.