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You are here: Home Research Selected Publications Antitumor effect of the vascular-disrupting agent ZD6126 in a murine renal cell carcinoma model.

M Medinger, N Esser, J Soltau, K M Lehmann, M A Konerding, T Wolloscheck, A J Ryan, and J Drevs (2011)

Antitumor effect of the vascular-disrupting agent ZD6126 in a murine renal cell carcinoma model.

Int J Oncol, 38(2):455-64.

ZD6126 is a vascular-disrupting agent that affects the endothelial tubulin cytoskeleton causing selective occlusion of tumor vasculature and extensive tumor cell necrosis. The present study evaluated the antitumor and antivascular activities of ZD6126 in the clinically relevant murine renal cell carcinoma (RENCA) model and also evaluated biological response to therapy using color Doppler imaging as biomarker. Mice were implanted with RENCA tumor cells (day 0)and established tumors were treated with ZD6126 (100 mg/kg i.p.) or vehicle withrepeated intermittent doses on day 10, 14 and 18. ZD6126 treatment led to a significant reduction in tumor size and was associated with extensive tumor necrosis and a reduction in tumor blood flow versus controls. MVD increased withintermittent treatment (day 10, 14 and 18). In an additional study, animals weretreated at day 19 and quantitative three-dimensional microvascular corrosion casting was performed to enable detailed assessment of the tumor vascular architecture. Corrosion casting showed that tumor vessel architecture is affected by treatment, whereas pre-existing vessels in control tissues are practically not affected. Inter-vessel and inter-branch distances as well as vessel diameters are influenced by treatment. In conclusion, ZD6126 showed potent antitumor efficacy in the RENCA model and our data suggest that decrease in tumor blood flow may bea useful surrogate marker of treatment effect.

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