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Blood, 15 April 2005, Vol. 105, No. 8, pp. 3009-3010.
Another dangerous traveler in myeloma blood?UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL MUENSTER
The frequencies of circulating endothelial cells and endothelial progenitors are increased in the blood of myeloma patients and parallel disease activity and response to thalidomide treatment.
In recent years, intense research has also been devoted to the elucidation of tumor neovessel formation and, in particular, to the phenotype and origin of endothelial cells (ECs) involved. In addition to the recruitment of angiogenic ECs from neighboring micro-capillaries, a growing body of experimental work suggests that circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) essentially contribute to tumor angiogenesis. These EPCs are thought to originate from hemangioblasts persisting in adult bone marrow (reviewed in Ribatti,2 and Bailey and Fleming3). In a murine model, impaired recruitment of marrow-derived circulating EPCs was even shown to block tumor angiogenesis and growth, a finding that might pave the path for novel antiangiogenic strategies of cancer treatment.4 Along these lines, further intriguing evidence comes from studies in chronic myeloid leukemia. The latter data suggest that the endothelial progeny might also be derived from hemangioblastic precursors carrying the BCR/ABL fusion gene of the malignant clone.5
In the current issue of Blood, Zhang and colleagues demonstrate that circulating ECs (CECs) are significantly increased in the peripheral blood of MM patients (see figure) and that their frequency covaries with markers of disease activity, viz, levels of M protein and
Clearly, the data demonstrate that CECs/EPCs can serve as novel biomarkers of myeloma activity. Whether they add to the information provided by parameters currently in routine use will have to be shown by larger longitudinal studies. In addition, the correlation of CECs/EPCs with response to thalidomide treatment may suggest a previously unknown, direct or indirect, antiangiogenic mechanism of thalidomide action. However, whether such correlations are unique to thalidomide and its derivatives will also require further clinical investigations. Finally, the obvious assumption that circulating EPCs indeed contribute to neoangiogenesis in MM marrow and, consequently, to MM progression will have to be substantiated by appropriate experimental data. Although these and other questions remain, the authors have introduced important new perspectives on the potential mechanisms and therapeutic targets of MM-associated neoangiogenesis. References
Related Article in Blood Online:
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