PMID: 11911254Mar 26, 2002Paper

A quantitative angiogenesis model for efficacy testing of chemopreventive agents

Anticancer Research
S SharmaL Kopelovich

Abstract

One of the approaches in chemoprevention to prevent or delay the progression of precancerous lesions, is to apply chemopreventive agents that can potentially block angiogenesis. A quantitative in vivo angiogenesis inhibition assay was developed to test the efficacy of twelve chemopreventive agents that represent different chemical classes and multiple biological activities, using the chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) model and an oncogene-transfected angiogenic cell line (6 Ti ras/SV myc # 4). These tumorigenic cells held by a primary agarose pellet, were placed alone or with a secondary pellet incorporating five concentrations of the test agent, on an exposed CAM of 7-day-old chick embryo for 72 hours in a humidified chamber at 35 degrees C. The cell-induced angiogenic blood vessels, including the microvessels radiating from the cell pellet focal area, were scored using a computerized custom image analysis system. The results show that nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDS); aspirin, sulindac, sulindac sulfide and sulindac sulfone, were effective inhibitors of cell-induced angiogenesis (23-66%). Aspirin displayed a dose-dependent response with the highest inhibition at 300 microM and an EC50 (the effective molar conce...Continue Reading

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