Combining two strategies to improve perfusion and drug delivery in solid tumors

T Stylianopoulos, RK Jain - Proceedings of the National …, 2013 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013National Acad Sciences
Blood perfusion in tumors can be significantly lower than that in the surrounding normal
tissue owing to the leakiness and/or compression of tumor blood vessels. Impaired perfusion
reduces oxygen supply and results in a hypoxic microenvironment. Hypoxia promotes tumor
progression and immunosuppression, and enhances the invasive and metastatic potential of
cancer cells. Furthermore, poor perfusion lowers the delivery of systemically administered
drugs. Therapeutic strategies to improve perfusion include reduction in vascular …
Blood perfusion in tumors can be significantly lower than that in the surrounding normal tissue owing to the leakiness and/or compression of tumor blood vessels. Impaired perfusion reduces oxygen supply and results in a hypoxic microenvironment. Hypoxia promotes tumor progression and immunosuppression, and enhances the invasive and metastatic potential of cancer cells. Furthermore, poor perfusion lowers the delivery of systemically administered drugs. Therapeutic strategies to improve perfusion include reduction in vascular permeability by vascular normalization and vascular decompression by alleviating physical forces (solid stress) inside tumors. Both strategies have shown promise, but guidelines on how to use these strategies optimally are lacking. To this end, we developed a mathematical model to guide the optimal use of these strategies. The model accounts for vascular, transvascular, and interstitial fluid and drug transport as well as the diameter and permeability of tumor vessels. Model simulations reveal an optimal perfusion region when vessels are uncompressed, but not very leaky. Within this region, intratumoral distribution of drugs is optimized, particularly for drugs 10 nm in diameter or smaller and of low binding affinity. Therefore, treatments should modify vessel diameter and/or permeability such that perfusion is optimal. Vascular normalization is more effective for hyperpermeable but largely uncompressed vessels (e.g., glioblastomas), whereas solid stress alleviation is more beneficial for compressed but less-permeable vessels (e.g., pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas). In the case of tumors with hyperpermeable and compressed vessels (e.g., subset of mammary carcinomas), the two strategies need to be combined for improved treatment outcomes.
National Acad Sciences