dc.description.abstract |
Cancer spreads by metastasis which is the ability of
cancer cells to penetrate into lymphatic and blood vessels, circulate
through the bloodstream, and then invade and grow in normal tissues
elsewhere. It is this ability to spread to other tissues and organs that
makes cancer a potentially life-threatening disease. Cancer researchers
involve in the study of the conditions necessary for cancer metastasis
have discovered that, the most critical event required is the growth of a
new network of blood vessels. This process of forming new blood
vessels is termed angiogenesis. Many angiogenic inhibitors have been
identified and used for therapeutic purposes but have not proved very
beneficial in terms of long-term survival. This could be due to the non-
specific nature of these inhibitors which accounts for their high toxic
levels. We believe the way forward is to identify angiogenic inhibitors
which are specific to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) or their
receptors (VEGFR-1, VEGFR-2, VEGFR-3). These target specific
inhibitors of angiogenesis which come with minimum toxic levels could
be explored to develop effective cancer therapy. |
en_US |