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Publication : Combined antiestrogen, antiangiogenic and anti-invasion therapy inhibits primary and metastatic tumor growth in the MMTVneu model of breast cancer.

First Author  Sacco MG Year  2003
Journal  Gene Ther Volume  10
Issue  22 Pages  1903-9
PubMed ID  14502219 Mgi Jnum  J:86083
Mgi Id  MGI:2678658 Doi  10.1038/sj.gt.3302082
Citation  Sacco MG, et al. (2003) Combined antiestrogen, antiangiogenic and anti-invasion therapy inhibits primary and metastatic tumor growth in the MMTVneu model of breast cancer. Gene Ther 10(22):1903-9
abstractText  Treatments available to women with locally advanced breast cancer are unsatisfactory, since most patients succumb to metastatic spread. Therefore, there is a need to devise novel therapeutic combinations that effectively inhibit metastatization and to test them in animal models of breast cancer showing strong similarities with their human counterpart, including the ability to give rise to metastases. With these considerations in mind, tamoxifen (TAM), 4-hydrotamoxifen (4-HT) or liposome-complexed DNA constructs coding for antiangiogenic/anti-invasion proteins (angiostatin, TIMP-2, IFN-alpha(1), sFLT-1) were individually administered to MMTVneu transgenic mice. Significant inhibition of primary tumor growth was obtained with TAM (40% inhibition, P=0.049), angiostatin (85% inhibition, P=0.001) and TIMP-2 (60% inhibition, P=0.015). No lung metastasis was observed in any of these treated mice at 5 months, compared with a rate of 70% in control groups. These observations were the basis for designing a combined treatment with all these compounds. The association of angiostatin, TIMP-2 and TAM was greatly effective at the primary tumor level (90% inhibition, P=0.01). Moreover, all the mice treated with this association were metastasis free at a time point (6 months) in which seven out of nine control mice were either dead from disseminated cancer or showed lung metastasis. This combined therapy could become an important component of anticancer therapy in humans.
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