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Data from VEGF-Targeted Therapy Stably Modulates the Glycolytic Phenotype of Tumor Cells

Posted on 2023-03-30 - 22:30
Abstract

Anti-VEGF therapy perturbs tumor metabolism, severely impairing oxygen, glucose, and ATP levels. In this study, we investigated the effects of anti-VEGF therapy in multiple experimental tumor models that differ in their glycolytic phenotypes to gain insights into optimal modulation of the metabolic features of this therapy. Prolonged treatments induced vascular regression and necrosis in tumor xenograft models, with highly glycolytic tumors becoming treatment resistant more rapidly than poorly glycolytic tumors. By PET imaging, prolonged treatments yielded an increase in both hypoxic and proliferative regions of tumors. A selection for highly glycolytic cells was noted and this metabolic shift was stable and associated with increased tumor aggressiveness and resistance to VEGF blockade in serially transplanted mice. Our results support the hypothesis that the highly glycolytic phenotype of tumor cells studied in xenograft models, either primary or secondary, is a cell-autonomous trait conferring resistance to VEGF blockade. The finding that metabolic traits of tumors can be selected by antiangiogenic therapy suggests insights into the evolutionary dynamics of tumor metabolism. Cancer Res; 75(1); 120–33. ©2014 AACR.

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Cancer Research

AUTHORS (21)

  • Matteo Curtarello
    Elisabetta Zulato
    Giorgia Nardo
    Silvia Valtorta
    Giulia Guzzo
    Elisabetta Rossi
    Giovanni Esposito
    Aichi Msaki
    Anna Pastò
    Andrea Rasola
    Luca Persano
    Francesco Ciccarese
    Roberta Bertorelle
    Sergio Todde
    Mario Plebani
    Henrike Schroer
    Stefan Walenta
    Wolfgang Mueller-Klieser
    Alberto Amadori
    Rosa Maria Moresco
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