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VEGF-A165b levels are reduced in breast cancer patients at primary diagnosis but increase after completion of cancer treatment

Maria Margarete Karsten, Maximilian Heinz Beck, Angela Rademacher, Julia Knabl, Jens‐Uwe Blohmer, Julia Jückstöck, Julia Caroline Radosa, Paul Jank, Brigitte Rack, Wolfgang Janni

2020Scientific Reports42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The antiangiogenic splice variant VEGF-A165b is downregulated in a variety of cancer entities, but little is known so far about circulating plasma levels. The present analysis addresses this question and examines circulating VEGF-A/VEGF-A165b levels in a collective of female high-risk breast cancer patients over the course of treatment. Within the SUCCES-A trial 205 patients were recruited after having received primary breast surgery. Using ELISA VEGF-A/VEGF-A165b concentrations were determined and correlated to clinical characteristics (1) before adjuvant chemotherapy, (2) four weeks and (3) two years after therapy and compared to healthy controls (n = 107). VEGF 165b levels were significantly elevated after completion of chemotherapy. Within the breast cancer cohort, VEGF-A165b levels increased two years after completion of chemotherapy. VEGF-A plasma concentrations were significantly elevated in the breast cancer cohort at all examined time points and decreased after treatment. VEGF-A levels two years after chemotherapy correlated with increased cancer related mortality, no such correlation could be found between VEGF-A165b and the examined clinical characteristics. Compared to controls, VEGF-A/VEGF-A165b ratios were decreased in patients before and after chemotherapy. Our data suggests that circulating VEGF-A165b is significantly reduced in women with primary breast cancer at time of diagnosis; furthermore, levels change during adjuvant treatment.

Topics & Concepts

CancerMedicineBreast cancerOncologyInternal medicineVEGF receptorsAngiogenesis and VEGF in CancerLymphatic System and DiseasesCoronary Interventions and Diagnostics
VEGF-A165b levels are reduced in breast cancer patients at primary diagnosis but increase after completion of cancer treatment | Litcius