Abstract

Sunitinib is a potent and clinically approved tyrosine kinase inhibitor that can suppress tumour growth by inhibiting angiogenesis. However, conflicting data exist regarding the effects of this drug on the growth of metastases in preclinical models. Here we use 4T1 and RENCA tumour cells, which both form lung metastases in Balb/c mice, to re-address the effects of sunitinib on the progression of metastatic disease in mice. We show that treatment of mice with sunitinib prior to intravenous injection of tumour cells can promote the seeding and growth of 4T1 lung metastases, but not RENCA lung metastases, showing that this effect is cell line dependent. However, increased metastasis occurred only upon administration of a very high sunitinib dose, but not when lower, clinically relevant doses were used. Mechanistically, high dose sunitinib led to a pericyte depletion effect in the lung vasculature that correlated with increased seeding of metastasis. By administering sunitinib to mice after intravenous injection of tumour cells, we demonstrate that while sunitinib does not inhibit the growth of 4T1 lung tumour nodules, it does block the growth of RENCA lung tumour nodules. This contrasting response was correlated with increased myeloid cell recruitment and persistent vascularisation in 4T1 tumours, whereas RENCA tumours recruited less myeloid cells and were more profoundly devascularised upon sunitinib treatment. Finally, we show that progression of 4T1 tumours in sunitinib treated mice results in increased hypoxia and increased glucose metabolism in these tumours and that this is associated with a poor outcome. Taken together, these data suggest that the effects of sunitinib on tumour progression are dose-dependent and tumour model-dependent. These findings have relevance for understanding how anti-angiogenic agents may influence disease progression when used in the adjuvant or metastatic setting in cancer patients.

Highlights

  • Sunitinib is an orally available tyrosine kinase inhibitor that potently inhibits vascular endothelial growth factorAngiogenesis (2012) 15:623–641(VEGF) receptors (VEGFR1, VEGFR2 and VEGFR3), platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) receptors (PDGFRa and PDGFRb) and several other receptor tyrosine kinases, including KIT receptor [1, 41, 46]

  • The ability of sunitinib to enhance the seeding of metastasis is cell line dependent Daily administration of sunitinib at a dose of 120 mg/kg/ day for 7 days prior to intravenous injection of tumour cells has been reported to promote the growth of metastases in mice and leads to a shortening of overall survival

  • In the present study we show that the ability of sunitinib to promote the growth of metastases is both tumour cell line dependent and sunitinib dose dependent

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Summary

Introduction

Sunitinib is an orally available tyrosine kinase inhibitor that potently inhibits vascular endothelial growth factorAngiogenesis (2012) 15:623–641(VEGF) receptors (VEGFR1, VEGFR2 and VEGFR3), platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) receptors (PDGFRa and PDGFRb) and several other receptor tyrosine kinases, including KIT receptor [1, 41, 46]. Sunitinib is an orally available tyrosine kinase inhibitor that potently inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor. Sunitinib has been shown to extend progression free survival and overall survival in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) and is used as first line treatment for this disease [44, 45]. Despite these promising results, 20–30 % of mRCC patients show no response to sunitinib and even those that do respond initially will inevitably develop resistance and progress after several months of treatment [30, 45, 50]. In trials of the VEGF neutralising antibody bevacizumab in metastatic breast, colorectal and lung cancer, only a subset of patients benefit from the combined use of bevacizumab with chemotherapy and the survival benefit afforded is measured only in terms of months or is not significant compared to chemotherapy alone [23, 35, 43, 51]

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