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Kennedy
Institute of Rheumatology (JM, MF, EP), London, and AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals
(RM, JK), Alderley Park, Macclesfield, Cheshire, United Kingdom
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SUMMARY: Maintenance of the invasive pannus in rheumatoid arthritis
is an integral part of disease progression. The synovial vasculature plays
an important role in the delivery of nutrients, oxygen, and inflammatory
cells to the synovium. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), an endothelial
mitogen expressed by cells within the synovial membrane, is thought to
contribute to the formation of synovial blood vessels. Our objective in
this study was to measure the kinetics of VEGF production in a murine
model of collagen-induced arthritis and to determine whether VEGF blockade
reduces disease progression. Synovial cells isolated from the knee joints
of naive or sham-immunized mice, or from mice immunized with collagen
but without arthritis, released little or no detectable VEGF. Onset of
arthritis was associated with expression of VEGF mRNA and protein. The
levels of VEGF secreted by synovial cells isolated from the joints of
mice with severe arthritis were significantly higher than from mice with
mild disease. To block VEGF activity, animals were treated after arthritis
onset with a soluble form of the Flt-1 VEGF receptor (sFlt), which was
polyethylene glycol (PEG)-linked to increase its in vivo half-life. Treatment
of arthritic mice with sFlt-PEG significantly reduced both clinical score
and paw swelling, compared with untreated or control-treated (heat-denatured
sFlt-PEG) animals. There was also significantly less joint inflammation
and reduced bone and cartilage destruction in sFlt-PEG-treated animals,
as assessed by histology. Our data demonstrate that, in collagen-induced
arthritis, expression of the potent angiogenic cytokine VEGF correlates
with disease severity. Furthermore, specific blockade of VEGF activity
results in attenuation of arthritis in both macroscopic and microscopic
parameters. These observations indicate that blood vessel formation is
integral to the development of arthritis and that blockade of VEGF activity
might be of therapeutic benefit in rheumatoid arthritis.
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