Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P39060 (endostatin)
2,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Standard chemotherapeutic drugs, when modified by the frequency and dose of administration, can target angiogenesis. This approach is referred to as antiangiogenic chemotherapy, low-dose chemotherapy, or metronomic chemotherapy. This study evaluated the feasibility of 6 months of metronomic chemotherapy, its toxicity and tolerability, surrogate markers of activity, and preliminary evidence of activity in children with recurrent or progressive cancer. Twenty consecutive children were enrolled and received continuous oral thalidomide and celecoxib with alternating oral etoposide and cyclophosphamide every 21 days for a planned duration of 6 months using antiangiogenic doses of all four drugs. Surrogate markers including bFGF, VEGF, endostatin, and thrombospondin were also evaluated. Therapy was well tolerated in this heavily pretreated population. Toxicities (predominantly reversible bone marrow suppression) responded to dose modifications. Sixty percent of the patients received less than the prescribed 6 months of therapy due to toxicity (one case of deep vein thrombosis), personal choice (1 patient), or disease progression (10 patients). Forty percent of the patients completed the 6 months of therapy, resulting in prolonged or persistent disease-free status. One quarter of all patients continue to be progression free more than 123 weeks from starting therapy. Sixteen percent of patients showed a radiographic partial response. Only elevated thrombospondin-1 levels appeared to correlate with prolonged response. This oral antiangiogenic chemotherapy regimen was well tolerated in this heavily pretreated pediatric population, which showed prolonged or persistent disease-free status, supporting the continued study of antiangiogenic/metronomic chemotherapy in human clinical trials.
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PMID:A feasibility trial of antiangiogenic (metronomic) chemotherapy in pediatric patients with recurrent or progressive cancer. 1628 85

The antiangiogenic agent bevacizumab showed synergistic effects when combined with chemotherapy in advanced breast cancer. We presently investigated the activity of bevacizumab in combination with chemotherapy, including capecitabine and vinorelbine, and endocrine therapy, including letrozole (+triptorelin in premenopausal women), as primary therapy for patients with ER and/or PgR > or =10% T2-T4a-c, N0-N2, M0 breast cancer. Biological end point included the proliferative activity (Ki67), whereas clinical end points were clinical response rate, pathological complete response (pCR) and tolerability. Circulating endothelial cells (CECs) and their progenitors, as surrogate markers of antiangiogenic activity, were measured at baseline and at surgery.Thirty-six women are evaluable. A clinical response rate of 86% (95% CI, 70-95) and no pCR were observed; Ki67 was significantly decreased by 71% (interquartile range, -82%, -62%). Toxicity was manageable: two grade 3 hypertension, four grade 3 deep venous thrombosis and no grade >2 proteinuria were observed. Treatment significantly decreased the percentage of viable CECs and prevented the chemotherapy-induced mobilisation of circulating progenitors. Basal circulating progenitors were positively associated with clinical response. In conclusion, bevacizumab is feasible and active in association with primary chemoendocrine therapy for ER-positive tumours in terms of proliferation inhibition, clinical response and antiangiogenic activity.
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PMID:Preoperative bevacizumab combined with letrozole and chemotherapy in locally advanced ER- and/or PgR-positive breast cancer: clinical and biological activity. 1894 58