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Antiangiogenic agents may substantially reduce contrast enhancement in glioblastoma multiforme related to reduced vascular permeability rather than actual tumor response
Bevacizumab (Avastin): Anti-VEGF is main antiangiogenic agent currently used for treatment of recurrent malignant gliomas
Cediranib : VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor has been tested in recent high-grade glioma treatment trials
Decreased enhancement in patient with malignant glioma treated with anti-VEGF agent
May see persistent FLAIR and diffusion restriction, despite decreased enhancement
DWI and ADC have been proposed as imaging markers for tumor response in presence of antiangiogenic agents to address pseudoresponse
Beware, decreased enhancement in tumor follow-up study may be true treatment response or pseudoresponse in setting of newer therapies
DSC: Early changes in relative cerebral blood volume after initiation of antiangiogenic therapy may distinguish pseudoresponse from true treatment response
Treatment response
Steroid effect
Antiangiogenic agents normalize hyperpermeable tumor vasculature and restore blood-brain barrier
Local response to tumor growth is controlled, but diffuse infiltration and distant metastases are common
Antiangiogenic agents significantly improve 6-month progression-free survival but may not affect overall survival
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)
Treatment effect, Avastin effect
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