4.4 Article

Alveolar Hypoxia Promotes Murine Lung Tumor Growth through a VEGFR-2/EGFR-Dependent Mechanism

Journal

CANCER PREVENTION RESEARCH
Volume 5, Issue 8, Pages 1061-1071

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-12-0069-T

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Funding

  1. Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Review
  2. NHLBI [RO1 HL078929]
  3. PPG [HL14985]
  4. NCI [P50 CA58187, RO1 CA164780]

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Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are at an increased risk for the development of lung cancer, the mechanisms for which are incompletely understood. We hypothesized that the hypoxic pulmonary microenvironment present in COPD would augment lung carcinogenesis. Mice were subjected to chemical carcinogenesis protocols and placed in either hypoxia or normoxia. Mice exposed to chronic hypoxia developed tumors with increased volume compared with normoxic controls. Both lungs and tumors from hypoxic mice showed a preferential stabilization of HIF-2 alpha and increased expression of VEGFA, FGF2, and their receptors as well as other survival, proliferation, and angiogenic signaling pathways regulated by HIF-2 alpha. We showed that tumors arising in hypoxic animals have increased sensitivity to VEGFR-2/EGFR inhibition, as chemoprevention with vandetanib showed markedly increased activity in hypoxic mice. These studies showed that lung tumors arising in a hypoxic microenvironment express increased growth, angiogenic, and survival signaling that could contribute to the increased lung cancer risk in COPD. Furthermore, the differential sensitivity of tumors arising in hypoxia to VEGFR-2/EGFR inhibition suggests that the altered signaling present in tumors arising in hypoxic lung might be therapeutically exploited in patients with underlying COPD. Cancer Prev Res; 5(8); 1061-71. (C) 2012 AACR.

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