Definition
- Formation of new blood vessels from pre-existing ones.
- A normal physiological process in wound healing, growth, and reproduction.
- In cancer, tumors hijack angiogenesis to secure oxygen, nutrients, and a route for metastasis.
Key Mediators
- Pro-angiogenic factors:
- VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) → most important driver
- FGF (fibroblast growth factor)
- PDGF (platelet-derived growth factor)
- Angiopoietins (Ang-1, Ang-2)
- HIF-1α (hypoxia-inducible factor → upregulates VEGF in hypoxia)
- Anti-angiogenic factors (endogenous):
- Thrombospondin-1
- Angiostatin
- Endostatin
Role in Cancer
- Angiogenic switch: tumor shifts balance toward pro-angiogenic factors.
- Provides blood supply for tumors to grow >1–2 mm.
- Facilitates metastasis via vascular invasion.
Therapeutic Targeting
Anti-angiogenic therapy is a key oncology strategy:
- Monoclonal antibodies
- Bevacizumab → binds VEGF-A
- Ramucirumab → binds VEGFR-2
- Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) (oral, multi-targeted VEGFR inhibitors)
- Fusion proteins
- Aflibercept (VEGF-trap)
Toxicities of Anti-VEGF/Anti-Angiogenic Therapy
- Hypertension (class effect, due to ↓ nitric oxide production)
- Proteinuria (glomerular injury)
- Arterial thromboembolism, bleeding risk
- Delayed wound healing
- GI perforation (rare but serious)
- Hand–foot syndrome, diarrhea (TKIs especially)
Pharmacist Clinical Pearl
- Always hold bevacizumab before/after surgery (at least 28 days) to avoid wound healing complications.
- Monitor BP, urinalysis (proteinuria), and signs of bleeding/clotting.

