Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Breast Cancer Research 1/2000

01-03-2000 | Speaker presentations

Hypoxia and tumour angiogenesis involved in breast cancer progression and targets for therapy

Author: AL Harris

Published in: Breast Cancer Research | Special Issue 1/2000

Login to get access

Excerpt

Tumours cannot grow above 1-2 mm in diameter without developing a new blood supply. We, and others, have shown that the number of blood vessels in breast cancer is related to prognosis, and that multiple growth-factor pathways control angiogenesis. One of the most important ones is vascular endothelial growth factor and thymidine phosphorylase. Both are targets of therapy, and currently there are trials running inhibiting VEGF signalling pathway and also using prodrugs activated by thymidine phosphorylase to produce cytotoxic agents. Hypoxia is a major factor switching on angiogenesis, and new approaches using the hypoxia signalling pathways to activate gene therapy in breast cancer have been initiated. Hypoxia activates vascular endothelial growth factor production by the transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor 1a (hif1), which binds to specific DNA sequences. Using DNA constructs with multimers of these response elements has generated reagents that will specifically switch on under hypoxia and activate prodrugs. Since tumours are much more hypoxic than normal tissues, this should provide marked differential expression. Also, these areas of tumours are resistant to radiotherapy, so it will be particularly useful in worse prognosis resistant tumours. We raised antibodies to hif1, and to another member of the family, hif2. …
Metadata
Title
Hypoxia and tumour angiogenesis involved in breast cancer progression and targets for therapy
Author
AL Harris
Publication date
01-03-2000
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Breast Cancer Research / Issue Special Issue 1/2000
Electronic ISSN: 1465-542X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr189

Other articles of this Special Issue 1/2000

Breast Cancer Research 1/2000 Go to the issue
Webinar | 19-02-2024 | 17:30 (CET)

Keynote webinar | Spotlight on antibody–drug conjugates in cancer

Antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs) are novel agents that have shown promise across multiple tumor types. Explore the current landscape of ADCs in breast and lung cancer with our experts, and gain insights into the mechanism of action, key clinical trials data, existing challenges, and future directions.

Dr. Véronique Diéras
Prof. Fabrice Barlesi
Developed by: Springer Medicine