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Dive into the research topics where Vikas Kundra is active.

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Featured researches published by Vikas Kundra.


Nature Medicine | 2006

Chronic stress promotes tumor growth and angiogenesis in a mouse model of ovarian carcinoma

Premal H. Thaker; Liz Y. Han; Aparna A. Kamat; Jesusa M.G. Arevalo; Rie Takahashi; Chunhua Lu; Nicholas B. Jennings; Guillermo N. Armaiz-Pena; James A. Bankson; Murali Ravoori; William M. Merritt; Yvonne G. Lin; Lingegowda S. Mangala; Tae Jin Kim; Robert L. Coleman; Charles N. Landen; Yang Li; Edward Felix; Angela Sanguino; Robert A. Newman; Mary Lloyd; David M. Gershenson; Vikas Kundra; Gabriel Lopez-Berestein; Susan K. Lutgendorf; Steven W. Cole; Anil K. Sood

Stress can alter immunological, neurochemical and endocrinological functions, but its role in cancer progression is not well understood. Here, we show that chronic behavioral stress results in higher levels of tissue catecholamines, greater tumor burden and more invasive growth of ovarian carcinoma cells in an orthotopic mouse model. These effects are mediated primarily through activation of the tumor cell cyclic AMP (cAMP)–protein kinase A (PKA) signaling pathway by the β2 adrenergic receptor (encoded by ADRB2). Tumors in stressed animals showed markedly increased vascularization and enhanced expression of VEGF, MMP2 and MMP9, and we found that angiogenic processes mediated the effects of stress on tumor growth in vivo. These data identify β-adrenergic activation of the cAMP–PKA signaling pathway as a major mechanism by which behavioral stress can enhance tumor angiogenesis in vivo and thereby promote malignant cell growth. These data also suggest that blocking ADRB-mediated angiogenesis could have therapeutic implications for the management of ovarian cancer.


Cancer Cell | 2010

Regulation of Tumor Angiogenesis by EZH2

Chunhua Lu; Hee Dong Han; Lingegowda S. Mangala; Rouba Ali-Fehmi; Christopher S. Newton; Laurent Ozbun; Guillermo N. Armaiz-Pena; Wei Hu; Rebecca L. Stone; Adnan R. Munkarah; Murali Ravoori; Mian M.K. Shahzad; Jeong Won Lee; Edna Mora; Robert R. Langley; Amy R. Carroll; Koji Matsuo; Whitney A. Spannuth; Rosemarie Schmandt; Nicholas B. Jennings; Blake W. Goodman; Robert B. Jaffe; Alpa M. Nick; Hye Sun Kim; Eylem Güven; Ya Huey Chen; Long Yuan Li; Ming Chuan Hsu; Robert L. Coleman; George A. Calin

Although VEGF-targeted therapies are showing promise, new angiogenesis targets are needed to make additional gains. Here, we show that increased Zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) expression in either tumor cells or in tumor vasculature is predictive of poor clinical outcome. The increase in endothelial EZH2 is a direct result of VEGF stimulation by a paracrine circuit that promotes angiogenesis by methylating and silencing vasohibin1 (vash1). Ezh2 silencing in the tumor-associated endothelial cells inhibited angiogenesis mediated by reactivation of VASH1, and reduced ovarian cancer growth, which is further enhanced in combination with ezh2 silencing in tumor cells. Collectively, these data support the potential for targeting ezh2 as an important therapeutic approach.


Cancer Research | 2008

A Vascular Targeted Pan Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase Inhibitor Prodrug, SF1126, with Antitumor and Antiangiogenic Activity

Joseph R. Garlich; Pradip De; Nandini Dey; Jing Dong Su; Xiaodong Peng; Antoinette Miller; Ravoori Murali; Yiling Lu; Gordon B. Mills; Vikas Kundra; H-K. Shu; Qiong Peng; Donald L. Durden

PTEN and the pan phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor 2-(4-morpholinyl)-8-phenyl-4H-1 benzopyran-4-one (LY294002) exert significant control over tumor-induced angiogenesis and tumor growth in vivo. The LY294002 compound is not a viable drug candidate due to poor pharmacologic variables of insolubility and short half-life. Herein, we describe the development and antitumor activity of a novel RGDS-conjugated LY294002 prodrug, termed SF1126, which is designed to exhibit increased solubility and bind to specific integrins within the tumor compartment, resulting in enhanced delivery of the active compound to the tumor vasculature and tumor. SF1126 is water soluble, has favorable pharmacokinetics, and is well tolerated in murine systems. The capacity of SF1126 to inhibit U87MG and PC3 tumor growth was enhanced by the RGDS integrin (alpha v beta 3/alpha 5 beta 1) binding component, exhibiting increased activity compared with a false RADS-targeted prodrug, SF1326. Antitumor activity of SF1126 was associated with the pharmacokinetic accumulation of SF1126 in tumor tissue and the pharmacodynamic knockdown of phosphorylated AKT in vivo. Furthermore, SF1126 seems to exhibit both antitumor and antiangiogenic activity. The results support SF1126 as a viable pan PI3K inhibitor for phase I clinical trials in cancer and provide support for a new paradigm, the application of pan PI3K inhibitory prodrugs for the treatment of cancer.


Nature Communications | 2013

Tumour angiogenesis regulation by the miR-200 family

Chad V. Pecot; Rajesha Rupaimoole; Da Yang; Rehan Akbani; Cristina Ivan; Chunhua Lu; Sherry Y. Wu; Hee Dong Han; Maitri Y. Shah; Cristian Rodriguez-Aguayo; Justin Bottsford-Miller; Yuexin Liu; Sang Bae Kim; Anna K. Unruh; Vianey Gonzalez-Villasana; Li Huang; Behrouz Zand; Myrthala Moreno-Smith; Lingegowda S. Mangala; Morgan Taylor; Heather J. Dalton; Vasudha Sehgal; Yunfei Wen; Yu Kang; Keith A. Baggerly; Ju Seog Lee; Prahlad T. Ram; Murali Ravoori; Vikas Kundra; Xinna Zhang

The miR-200 family is well known to inhibit the epithelial-mesenchymal transition, suggesting it may therapeutically inhibit metastatic biology. However, conflicting reports regarding the role of miR-200 in suppressing or promoting metastasis in different cancer types have left unanswered questions. Here we demonstrate a difference in clinical outcome based on miR-200s role in blocking tumour angiogenesis. We demonstrate that miR-200 inhibits angiogenesis through direct and indirect mechanisms by targeting interleukin-8 and CXCL1 secreted by the tumour endothelial and cancer cells. Using several experimental models, we demonstrate the therapeutic potential of miR-200 delivery in ovarian, lung, renal and basal-like breast cancers by inhibiting angiogenesis. Delivery of miR-200 members into the tumour endothelium resulted in marked reductions in metastasis and angiogenesis, and induced vascular normalization. The role of miR-200 in blocking cancer angiogenesis in a cancer-dependent context defines its utility as a potential therapeutic agent.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2011

Dual Inhibition of Tumor Energy Pathway by 2-Deoxyglucose and Metformin Is Effective against a Broad Spectrum of Preclinical Cancer Models

Jae Ho Cheong; Eun Sung Park; Jiyong Liang; Jennifer B. Dennison; Dimitra Tsavachidou; Catherine Nguyen-Charles; Kwai Wa Cheng; Hassan Hall; Dong Zhang; Yiling Lu; Murali Ravoori; Vikas Kundra; Jaffer A. Ajani; Ju Seog Lee; Waun Ki Hong; Gordon B. Mills

Tumor cell proliferation requires both growth signals and sufficient cellular bioenergetics. The AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) pathway seems dominant over the oncogenic signaling pathway suppressing cell proliferation. This study investigated the preclinical efficacy of targeting the tumor bioenergetic pathway using a glycolysis inhibitor 2-deoxyglucose (2DG) and AMPK agonists, AICAR and metformin. We evaluated the in vitro antitumor activity of 2DG, metformin or AICAR alone, and 2DG in combination either with metformin or AICAR. We examined in vivo efficacy using xenograft mouse models. 2DG alone was not sufficient to promote tumor cell death, reflecting the limited efficacy showed in clinical trials. A combined use of 2DG and AICAR also failed to induce cell death. However, 2DG and metformin led to significant cell death associated with decrease in cellular ATP, prolonged activation of AMPK, and sustained autophagy. Gene expression analysis and functional assays revealed that the selective AMPK agonist AICAR augments mitochondrial energy transduction (OXPHOS) whereas metformin compromises OXPHOS. Importantly, forced energy restoration with methyl pyruvate reversed the cell death induced by 2DG and metformin, suggesting a critical role of energetic deprivation in the underlying mechanism of cell death. The combination of 2DG and metformin inhibited tumor growth in mouse xenograft models. Deprivation of tumor bioenergetics by dual inhibition of energy pathways might be an effective novel therapeutic approach for a broad spectrum of human tumors. Mol Cancer Ther; 10(12); 2350–62. ©2011 AACR.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Androgen receptor-negative human prostate cancer cells induce osteogenesis in mice through FGF9-mediated mechanisms.

Zhi Gang Li; Paul Mathew; Jun Yang; Michael W. Starbuck; Amado J. Zurita; Jie Liu; Charles Sikes; Asha S. Multani; Adriana Lopez; Jing Wang; Tina V. Fanning; Victor G. Prieto; Vikas Kundra; Elba Vazquez; Patricia Troncoso; Austin K. Raymond; Christopher J. Logothetis; Sue-Hwa Lin; Sankar N. Maity; Nora M. Navone

In prostate cancer, androgen blockade strategies are commonly used to treat osteoblastic bone metastases. However, responses to these therapies are typically brief, and the mechanism underlying androgen-independent progression is not clear. Here, we established what we believe to be the first human androgen receptor-negative prostate cancer xenografts whose cells induced an osteoblastic reaction in bone and in the subcutis of immunodeficient mice. Accordingly, these cells grew in castrated as well as intact male mice. We identified FGF9 as being overexpressed in the xenografts relative to other bone-derived prostate cancer cells and discovered that FGF9 induced osteoblast proliferation and new bone formation in a bone organ assay. Mice treated with FGF9-neutralizing antibody developed smaller bone tumors and reduced bone formation. Finally, we found positive FGF9 immunostaining in prostate cancer cells in 24 of 56 primary tumors derived from human organ-confined prostate cancer and in 25 of 25 bone metastasis cases studied. Collectively, these results suggest that FGF9 contributes to prostate cancer-induced new bone formation and may participate in the osteoblastic progression of prostate cancer in bone. Androgen receptor-null cells may contribute to the castration-resistant osteoblastic progression of prostate cancer cells in bone and provide a preclinical model for studying therapies that target these cells.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2007

Pharmacodynamic Markers of Perifosine Efficacy

Bryan T. Hennessy; Yiling Lu; Enrique Poradosu; Qianghua Yu; Shuangxing Yu; Hassan Hall; Mark S. Carey; Murali Ravoori; Ana M. Gonzalez-Angulo; Robert Birch; I. Craig Henderson; Vikas Kundra; Gordon B. Mills

Purpose: It is critical to develop methods to quantify the early pharmacodynamic effects of targeted therapeutics in vivo to make drug development more efficient and ensure biologically relevant dosing. Furthermore, an ability to identify patients likely to respond to targeted therapeutics would decrease the size, duration, and cost of clinical trials, resulting in more efficient translation to improved patient outcomes. Recent studies suggest that perifosine inhibits the phosphatidylinositol-3′-kinase (PI3K) pathway by preventing cell membrane recruitment of the AKT pleckstrin homology domain. Experimental Design: A novel functional proteomics technology, reverse phase protein array, was used to establish and quantify pharmacodynamic markers of perifosine efficacy. Results: Perifosine selectively prevents AKT recruitment to the membrane and blocks activation of downstream effectors. Perifosine inhibited breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer models. Growth inhibition was associated with apoptosis. Activation of AKT as a consequence of genomic aberrations predicted perifosine efficacy. In cell lines and xenografts, there was a highly statistically significant correlation between the degree of antitumor efficacy of different perifosine doses and quantified down-regulation of phosphorylation of AKT and of its downstream targets, particularly S6. Conclusions: Because of a strong correlation between proportional modulation of PI3K pathway biomarkers and quantified perifosine efficacy, it is likely that early measurement of such pharmacodynamic biomarkers with reverse phase protein array will optimize selection of responding patients and guide perifosine dosing. Furthermore, PI3K pathway activation status may allow baseline selection of patients most likely to respond to perifosine alone or in combination with other therapies.


Lancet Oncology | 2011

Phase 1–2 study of docetaxel plus aflibercept in patients with recurrent ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube cancer

Robert L. Coleman; Linda R. Duska; Pedro T. Ramirez; John V. Heymach; Aparna A. Kamat; Susan C. Modesitt; Kathleen M. Schmeler; Revathy B. Iyer; Michael E. Garcia; Debbie L Miller; Edward F. Jackson; Chaan S. Ng; Vikas Kundra; Robert B. Jaffe; Anil K. Sood

BACKGROUND Biologically targeted therapies have been postulated as a viable strategy to improve outcomes for women with ovarian cancer. We assessed the safety, tolerance, pharmacokinetics, relevant circulating and image-derived biomarkers, and clinical activity of combination aflibercept and docetaxel in this population. METHODS For the phase 1 (pharmacokinetic) study, eligible patients had measurable, recurrent or persistent epithelial ovarian, primary peritoneal, or fallopian tube carcinoma with a maximum of two prior chemotherapy regimens. Aflibercept was administered intravenously over three dose levels (2, 4, or 6 mg/kg; one dose every 21 days) to identify the maximum tolerated dose for the phase 2 study. Pharmacokinetics were assessed and dynamic imaging was done during a lead-in phase with single-agent aflibercept (cycle 0) and during combination therapy with intravenous docetaxel (75 mg/m(2)). Eligibility for the phase 2 study was the same as for phase 1. Patients were enrolled in a two-stage design and given aflibercept 6 mg/kg intravenously and docetaxel 75 mg/m(2) intravenously, every 3 weeks. The primary endpoint was objective response rate (ORR) as assessed by Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.0. The trial has completed enrolment and all patients are now off study. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00436501. FINDINGS From the phase 1 study, the recommended phase 2 doses of aflibercept and docetaxel were found to be 6 mg/kg and 75 mg/m(2), respectively. Log-linear pharmacokinetics (for unbound aflibercept) were observed for the three dose levels. No dose-limiting toxicities were noted. 46 evaluable patients were enrolled in the phase 2 trial; 33 were platinum resistant (15 refractory) and 13 were platinum sensitive. The confirmed ORR was 54% (25 of 46; 11 patients had a complete response and 14 had a partial response). Grade 3-4 toxicities observed in more than two patients (5%) were: neutropenia in 37 patients (80%); leucopenia in 25 patients (54%); fatigue in 23 patients (50%); dyspnoea in ten patients (22%); and stomatitis in three patients (7%). Adverse events specifically associated with aflibercept were grade 1-2 hypertension in five patients (11%), and grade 2 proteinuria in one patient (2%). INTERPRETATION Combination aflibercept plus docetaxel can be safely administered at the dose and schedule reported here, and is associated with substantial antitumour activity. These findings suggest that further clinical development of this combination in ovarian cancer is warranted. FUNDING US National Cancer Institute, US Department of Defense, Sanofi-Aventis, Gynecologic Cancer Foundation, Marcus Foundation, and the Commonwealth Foundation.


Radiographics | 2011

Quality Initiatives: CT Radiation Dose Reduction: How to Implement Change without Sacrificing Diagnostic Quality

Eric P. Tamm; X. Rong John; Dianna D. Cody; Randy D. Ernst; Nancy E. Fitzgerald; Vikas Kundra

The risks and benefits of using computed tomography (CT) as opposed to another imaging modality to accomplish a particular clinical goal should be weighed carefully. To accurately assess radiation risks and keep radiation doses as low as reasonably achievable, radiologists must be knowledgeable about the doses delivered during various types of CT studies performed at their institutions. The authors of this article propose a process improvement approach that includes the estimation of effective radiation dose levels, formulation of dose reduction goals, modification of acquisition protocols, assessment of effects on image quality, and implementation of changes necessary to ensure quality. A first step toward developing informed radiation dose reduction goals is to become familiar with the radiation dose values and radiation-associated health risks reported in the literature. Next, to determine the baseline dose values for a CT study at a particular institution, dose data can be collected from the CT scanners, interpreted, tabulated, and graphed. CT protocols can be modified to reduce overall effective dose by using techniques such as automated exposure control and iterative reconstruction, as well as by decreasing the number of scanning phases, increasing the section thickness, and adjusting the peak voltage (kVp setting), tube current-time product (milliampere-seconds), and pitch. Last, PDSA (plan, do, study, act) cycles can be established to detect and minimize negative effects of dose reduction methods on image quality.


European Radiology | 2011

Diffusion weighted imaging in prostate cancer

Cher Heng Tan; Jihong Wang; Vikas Kundra

Diffusion-weighted imaging has generated substantial interest in the hope that it can be developed into a robust technique to improve the accuracy of MRI for the evaluation of prostate cancer. This technique has the advantages of short acquisition times, no need for intravenous administration of contrast medium, and the ability to study diffusion of water molecules that indirectly reflects tissue cellularity. In this article, we review the existing literature on the utility of DWI in tumour detection, localisation, treatment response, limitations of the technique, how it compares with other imaging techniques, technical considerations and future directions.

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Murali Ravoori

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Lin Han

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Sheela P. Singh

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Wei Wei

Anhui Medical University

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James A. Bankson

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Anil K. Sood

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Jingfei Ma

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Chunhua Lu

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Nora M. Navone

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Priya Bhosale

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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