Relationship between human tumour angiogenic profile and combretastatin-induced vascular shutdown: An exploratory study

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Abstract

Combretastatin-A4-phosphate (CA4P) acts most effectively against immature tumour vasculature. We investigated whether histological angiogenic profile can explain the differential sensitivity of human tumours to CA4P, by correlating the kinetic changes demonstrated by dynamic MRI (DCE-MRI) in response to CA4P, with tumour immunohistochemical angiogenic markers. Tissue was received from 24 patients (mean age 59, range 32-73, 18 women, 6 men). An angiogenic profile was performed using standard immunohistochemical techniques. Dynamic MRI data were obtained for the same patients before and 4 h after CA4P. Three patients showed a statistically significant fall in Ktrans following CA4P, and one a statistically significant fall in IAUGC60. No statistically significant correlations were seen between the continuous or categorical variables and the DCE-MRI kinetic parameters other than between ang-2 and K trans (P=0.044). In conclusion, we found no strong relationships between changes in DCE-MRI kinetic variables following CA4P and the immunohistochemical angiogenic profile. © 2008 Cancer Research.

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Gaya, A., Daley, F., Taylor, N. J., Tozer, G., Qureshi, U., Padhani, A., … Rustin, G. (2008). Relationship between human tumour angiogenic profile and combretastatin-induced vascular shutdown: An exploratory study. British Journal of Cancer, 99(2), 321–326. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6604426

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