Microcirculation of secondary bone tumors in vivo: the impact of minor surgery at a distal site.

Standard

Microcirculation of secondary bone tumors in vivo: the impact of minor surgery at a distal site. / Schäfer, Christian; Fuhrhop, Ina; Schröder, Malte; Viezens, Lennart; Wellbrock, Jasmin; Fiedler, Walter; Rüther, Wolfgang; Hansen-Algenstaedt, Nils.

In: J ORTHOP RES, Vol. 28, No. 11, 11, 2010, p. 1515-1521.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{7362a57b4b5240cf840356c12599d18d,
title = "Microcirculation of secondary bone tumors in vivo: the impact of minor surgery at a distal site.",
abstract = "Microcirculatory properties of tumors play a pivotal role in tumor progression and inefficacy of therapies. It has been hypothesized that surgical interventions result in an accelerated tumor growth by increasing the level of pro-angiogenic cytokines with subsequent amplification of tumor angiogenesis. To characterize the microvascular properties of secondary bone tumors in vivo and determine the impact of minor surgery on the microcirculation, we performed intravital microscopy over 25 days using a xenograft model of breast cancer tumor growth (MCF-7) in bone. After engraftment of tumors the mice were treated with a mastectomy versus no surgery. Tumor growth was accompanied by angiogenic sprouting and decreased vascular diameters while blood flow rate and tumor perfusion remained constant. Mastectomy initially led to a significant reduction of functional vascular density, increased vascular diameter, and decreased blood flow velocities. However, neither tumor growth nor tissue perfusion was different between the groups. The presented study corroborates the assumption that tumor microcirculation in bone exhibits similar time-dependent alterations compared to soft tissue tumors. A minor surgical intervention did not change tumor growth kinetics however microcirculatory properties were altered. Whether major surgery has an impact on tumor growth in bone should be clarified in further studies.",
author = "Christian Sch{\"a}fer and Ina Fuhrhop and Malte Schr{\"o}der and Lennart Viezens and Jasmin Wellbrock and Walter Fiedler and Wolfgang R{\"u}ther and Nils Hansen-Algenstaedt",
year = "2010",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "28",
pages = "1515--1521",
journal = "J ORTHOP RES",
issn = "0736-0266",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Microcirculation of secondary bone tumors in vivo: the impact of minor surgery at a distal site.

AU - Schäfer, Christian

AU - Fuhrhop, Ina

AU - Schröder, Malte

AU - Viezens, Lennart

AU - Wellbrock, Jasmin

AU - Fiedler, Walter

AU - Rüther, Wolfgang

AU - Hansen-Algenstaedt, Nils

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Microcirculatory properties of tumors play a pivotal role in tumor progression and inefficacy of therapies. It has been hypothesized that surgical interventions result in an accelerated tumor growth by increasing the level of pro-angiogenic cytokines with subsequent amplification of tumor angiogenesis. To characterize the microvascular properties of secondary bone tumors in vivo and determine the impact of minor surgery on the microcirculation, we performed intravital microscopy over 25 days using a xenograft model of breast cancer tumor growth (MCF-7) in bone. After engraftment of tumors the mice were treated with a mastectomy versus no surgery. Tumor growth was accompanied by angiogenic sprouting and decreased vascular diameters while blood flow rate and tumor perfusion remained constant. Mastectomy initially led to a significant reduction of functional vascular density, increased vascular diameter, and decreased blood flow velocities. However, neither tumor growth nor tissue perfusion was different between the groups. The presented study corroborates the assumption that tumor microcirculation in bone exhibits similar time-dependent alterations compared to soft tissue tumors. A minor surgical intervention did not change tumor growth kinetics however microcirculatory properties were altered. Whether major surgery has an impact on tumor growth in bone should be clarified in further studies.

AB - Microcirculatory properties of tumors play a pivotal role in tumor progression and inefficacy of therapies. It has been hypothesized that surgical interventions result in an accelerated tumor growth by increasing the level of pro-angiogenic cytokines with subsequent amplification of tumor angiogenesis. To characterize the microvascular properties of secondary bone tumors in vivo and determine the impact of minor surgery on the microcirculation, we performed intravital microscopy over 25 days using a xenograft model of breast cancer tumor growth (MCF-7) in bone. After engraftment of tumors the mice were treated with a mastectomy versus no surgery. Tumor growth was accompanied by angiogenic sprouting and decreased vascular diameters while blood flow rate and tumor perfusion remained constant. Mastectomy initially led to a significant reduction of functional vascular density, increased vascular diameter, and decreased blood flow velocities. However, neither tumor growth nor tissue perfusion was different between the groups. The presented study corroborates the assumption that tumor microcirculation in bone exhibits similar time-dependent alterations compared to soft tissue tumors. A minor surgical intervention did not change tumor growth kinetics however microcirculatory properties were altered. Whether major surgery has an impact on tumor growth in bone should be clarified in further studies.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 28

SP - 1515

EP - 1521

JO - J ORTHOP RES

JF - J ORTHOP RES

SN - 0736-0266

IS - 11

M1 - 11

ER -