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Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the common malignancies worldwide, accounting for a significant percentage of cancer mortality. Concurrent chemoradiation (CCRT) is now a standard treatment for unresectable malignancies of anorectum. To improve quality of life, CCRT is also commonly applied in treatment of lower rectal and anal canal cancer to preserve anal sphincter function. The most commonly used chemotherapeutic drugs combined with radiation as radiosensitizers is 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPC), which contribute to the tumor vessel formation, reflect the response to chemotherapy both in animal model and clinical trial. Thus, circulating EPC can be used as a marker for optimizing and monitoring the anti-angiogenesis therapy including angiogenesis inhibitors and chemotherapy. Whether circulating EPC can be served as a marker of CCRT efficacy or not remains undetermined. Since CCRT is now a standard treatment of locally advanced and high-risk CRC, the development of a surrogate marker for monitoring CCRT response and optimize treatment intensity is very important.
In this grant we intent to monitor the levels of circulating EPC in locally advanced and high-risk CRC patients before, during and after CCRT. To further characterize the changes in function and biology of EPC caused by CCRT, a syngeneic animal model will be also used to evaluate the clonogenecity and specific gene expression of EPC in tumor-bearing mice receiving CCRT.
Full description
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the common malignancies worldwide, accounting for a significant percentage of cancer mortality. The incidence in both developing and developed countries has been increasing over the past few decades (1). Radiation therapy, either as post-operative adjuvant treatment for resectable disease or definitive treatment along with chemotherapy for unresectable disease, has an important role in management of this cancer (1-4).
Concurrent chemoradiation (CCRT) is now a standard treatment for cervical cancer (bulky and locally advanced lesions) (5) and unresectable malignancies of gastrointestinal system origin (esophagus, stomach, pancreas and anorectum) (6-9). To improve quality of life, CCRT is also commonly applied in treatment of lower rectal and anal canal cancer to preserve anal sphincter function (9). The most commonly used chemotherapeutic drugs combined with radiation as radiosensitizers are cis-platinum, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and mitomycin C (6-9). These drugs are myelosuppressive and prone to cause life-threatening neutropenia, anemia or thrombocytopenia, which are more severe than those with radiotherapy alone (5-9). To avoid unnecessary over-treatment in CRC, the optimization of CCRT is of critical importance. Herein, the development of a surrogate marker for monitoring treatment efficacy is pivotal to optimize CCRT.
Angiogenesis is a heavily regulated process, which is involved by complex interactions between inhibitory and stimulatory angiogenic factors. It is essential for tumor growth, progression and metastasis and is correlated with poor prognosis in cancer patients including CRC. Many novel compounds that potently inhibit formation of neoplastic blood vessels have been recently developed. There is increasing interest in developing angiogeneis-suppressive agents for colorectal cancer treatment and growing number of anti-angiogenesis drugs currently being evaluated in clinical trials for CRC. Promising results have been reported include an increase in overall survival and reduction in the risk of death (Bevacizumab), reversal of cellular resistance (Cetuximab) and activity as second-line therapy in patients who have exhausted other available treatment options (Cetuximab, ABX-EGF, PTK-787, Gefitinib, Erlotinib) (10,11).
Although the therapeutic role of angiogenesis target therapy has been approved in cancer treatment including CRC, the way to optimize the dose of angiogenesis inhibitors remains to be determined because of the lack of reliable surrogate markers of tumor angiogenesis. Shaked et al. reported that the levels of circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPC), which contribute to the tumor vessel formation, reflect the anti-tumor efficacy of anti-angiogenesis regimens (12). Growing evidence suggests that the levels of circulating EPC reflect the response to chemotherapy both in animal model and clinical trial (13,14). Thus, circulating EPC can be used as a marker for optimizing and monitoring the anti-angiogenesis therapy including angiogenesis inhibitors and chemotherapy.
Whether circulating EPC can be served as a marker of CCRT efficacy or not remains undetermined. Since CCRT is now a standard treatment of locally advanced and high-risk CRC, the development of a surrogate marker for monitoring CCRT response and optimize treatment intensity, again, is very important.
In this grant we intent to monitor the levels of circulating EPC in locally advanced and high-risk CRC patients before, during and after CCRT. To further characterize the changes in function and biology of EPC caused by CCRT, a syngeneic animal model will be also used to evaluate the clonogenecity and specific gene expression of EPC in tumor-bearing mice receiving CCRT.
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