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Title: Antibody to vascular endothelial growth factor slows growth of an androgen-independent xenograft model of prostate cancer. Author: Fox WD, Higgins B, Maiese KM, Drobnjak M, Cordon-Cardo C, Scher HI, Agus DB. Journal: Clin Cancer Res; 2002 Oct; 8(10):3226-31. PubMed ID: 12374693. Abstract: PURPOSE: Human tumors are dependent on angiogenesis for growth, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a major regulator of this process. We aimed to study clinical utility of a recombinant humanized monoclonal anti-VEGF antibody (rhu alpha VEGF) in the treatment of the CWR22R androgen-independent xenograft model of prostate cancer. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: rhu alpha VEGF has previously shown clinical activity in several xenograft cancer models. We administered 5 mg/kg rhu alpha VEGF i.p. twice weekly as a single agent and together with paclitaxel to established CWR22R xenografts. RESULTS: rhu alphaVEGF inhibited established tumor growth by 85% (P < 0.01 for trajectories of the average tumor volumes of the groups) at 3 weeks, but after cessation of rhu alpha VEGF treatment, tumor regrowth ensued. A paclitaxel dosage of 6.25 mg/kg s.c. five times/week slowed tumor growth (72% compared with controls at 3 weeks, P = 0.02). The combination of paclitaxel and rhu alpha VEGF resulted in greater inhibition of tumor growth than that observed with either agent alone (98% growth inhibition, P = 0.024 versus rhualpha VEGF alone and P = 0.02 versus paclitaxel alone). Paclitaxel alone had no antiangiogenic effects at the dosage studied, whereas rhu alpha VEGF had significant inhibition of angiogenesis, noted by microvessel density and CD34 staining. CONCLUSIONS: rhu alpha VEGF has cytostatic clinical activity in this androgen-independent prostate cancer xenograft model, and the addition of paclitaxel demonstrates increased clinical activity.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]