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Review paper

The antineoplastic effect of low-molecular-weight heparins – a literature review

Justyna Bochenek
,
Mirosława Püsküllüoğlu
,
Krzysztof Krzemieniecki

Wspolczesna Onkol 2013; 17 (1): 6–13
Online publish date: 2013/03/15
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- The antineoplastic.pdf  [0.15 MB]
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Heparins – what are they?

Unfractionated heparin (UFH) and its derivatives, low-molecular-weight heparins (LMWH), are anticoagulants, from the glycosaminoglycans group [1]. LMWH, first introduced into treatment in the mid 1980s, have lower molecular weight than UFH, from which they are obtained by chemical or enzymatic depolymerization. LMWH differ from each other by their pharmacokinetic and anticoagulatory properties. Their mean molecular weight is 4500–5000 Daltons (Da), with a range from 1000 to 10000 Da [2]. In comparison to UFH, LMWH do not inhibit thrombin, as they do not possess the specific pentasaccharide sequence essential for interaction with antithrombin III. They neutralize coagulation factor Xa [3].

Heparins induce tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) secretion by the vascular endothelium, which also determines their anticoagulatory effect. They may bind platelets, inhibiting or stimulating their aggregation, according to the trial’s conditions [4]. Heparins also affect vascular permeability [5], inhibit endothelial smooth muscle proliferation [6] and osteoblast formation, and activate osteoclast production [7]. These effects are independent from anticoagulation. They are shown in Fig. 1.

Complications associated with heparins include hemorrhage, osteoporosis and hyperkalemia. Two types of thrombocytopenia after heparin administration have been described – immunological (heparin-induced thrombocytopenia) and non-immunological. Elderly patients with a history of malignancy, receiving additional treatment, are particularly exposed to these complications [2].

Association of venous thromboembolism with cancer

All three elements of Virchow’s triad – hypercoagulability, hemodynamic changes and endothelial dysfunction – contribute to venous thromboembolism (VTE) in the state of malignancy. Cancer cells produce coagulation and fibrinolysis modifiers such as tissue factor (TF), cancer procoagulant, human leukocyte antigen DR, the platelet aggregation/coagulation agent platelet and coagulation factor X activator, mucous glycoprotein, coagulation factor V and its receptor [8]. Tumor cells are also a source of cytokines stimulating the release of procoagulant factors by macrophages and endothelial cells. All these mechanisms lead to the activation of coagulation factor X and the clotting cascade. In a study of patients with idiopathic thrombosis, almost 10% were diagnosed with cancer in 5–10 subsequent years [9].

Cancer as a single negative prognostic factor increases the VTE risk over 4 times, while chemotherapy leads to a 6.5-fold change [10]. Hemostasis disorder is the second most frequent cause of death among cancer patients and coagulation hyperactivity is confirmed among 90% of them [11]. Patients with aggressive, metastatic disease are at the highest risk. Adenocarcinoma of the prostate and colon cancer among males and lung and ovarian tumors among females are related to a particularly high risk of VTE [12]. Moreover, surgery, chemotherapy and antiangiogenic treatment increase this risk. Finally, malignancy may be accompanied by VTE of untypical location [13].

Many patients with cancer are elderly, with prior surgical history and decreased mobility. This coincidence of negative prognostic factors makes estimating the VTE risk hard. We lack prospective studies on this topic. The risk factors are summarized in Table 1.

Heparin administration among patients with cancer

LMWH are administered in low doses in the primary prophylaxis and in high doses in venous thromboembolism (VTE) treatment.

The principles of prophylaxis and treatment with LMWH among patients with cancer are described by international societies of clinical oncology, such as ASCO (the American Society of Clinical Oncology), ESMO (the European Society for Medical Oncology) and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN). ASCO recommendations give the answers to five questions: Should patients with cancer receive VTE prevention: 1) during hospitalization; 2) during ambulatory chemotherapy; 3) around surgery? There are also guidelines concerning: 4) patients with established VTE and 5) LMWH use to improve survival [14].

ESMO guidelines published in 2009 are generally similar to ASCO’s [15]. There are differences concerning patients receiving hormonal therapy, adjuvant chemotherapy and with an implanted venous catheter, who do not require prophylaxis according to ESMO. NCCN recommends prophylactic anticoagulation therapy in all inpatient cases of cancer if not contraindicated and in ambulatory cancer surgery patients as well as in medical oncology patients at risk [16].

Generally, most recommendations are in accordance with the lack of need to use LMWH for increasing survival among patients with malignancy. At the same time, all recommendations suggest conducting large clinical trials on the positive effect of LMWH on cancer patients’ survival.

Mechanisms of anti-cancer action

Metastasis is a multistep process. Cancer cells have to enter the circulatory system, evade being recognized by the immune cells there, adhere to the endothelium of the targeted organ and colonize its tissues. Neoangiogenesis is required to sustain the tumor formation [17]. A number of possible mechanisms of antineoplastic effect of LMWH have been suggested. There is evidence for heparins’ inhibitory action on each of the above-mentioned steps as well as on tumor growth. The role of tissue factor, heparinase, chemokines, stromal proteins, cellular interactions as well as angiogenesis and immunology will be mentioned.



Tissue factor – is it the key factor?



TF forms a macromolecular complex with factor VII to activate both factor XI and X. The TF-factor VIIa complex directly stimulates production of growth factors, such as the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and cytokines [18]. It may also prolong cancer cells’ survival by p44/42 MAPK and Jak/STAT signaling [19, 20]. LMWH stimulate secretion of TFPI from the vascular endothelium. TFPI inhibits the signal for tumor growth and neoangiogenesis transferred by the TF [21–23]. Heparin’s ability to stimulate TFPI depends on the weight of its molecule [24]. Heparin chains of 6000-8000 Da are the most effective, among them tinzaparin with 6500 Da [25].



Chemokines



The formation of metastases may be reduced because of chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) signaling inhibition by LMWH. The overexpression of CXCR4 has been confirmed in metastasizing cancer cells of many different types. In the target organs – lungs, liver, lymph nodes, brain and bones – overexpression or abnormal activity of the ligand for CXCR4, stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1), was found [26]. CXCR4 contributes to the cancer cells’ epithelial-mesenchymal transformation.

According to a study on Chinese hamsters, LMWH (tinzaparin) inhibits CXCR4-SDF1 interaction by binding SDF1. In that study, heparin reduced the frequency of metastases of breast cancer [27].



Stromal proteins



Another possible mechanism of anti-tumor action is the influence on the endothelial glycocalyx. The damage of the glycocalyx by enzymes such as heparinase and hyaluronidase increases the vascular permeability. Glycocalyx modulates the cell adhesion to the endothelium by P- and L-selectins and syndecan-1, which also has an impact on the fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) and VEGF activity [28, 29]. Moreover, glycocalyx is a reservoir of anti-apoptotic growth factors and a source of pro-angiogenic proteins and cytokines that facilitate tissue permeability. Therefore, it has pro-metastatic properties. Heparin may also compete with the proteoglycan chains of heparin sulfate, which regulate metastasis formation [30].



Trans-cellular and cellular-matrix contacts



The anti-metastatic effect of LMWH may depend on the inhibition of endothelial cell adhesion. VLA4/VCAM-1 interaction and selectin binding seem to be targets [31]. Selectin-P is expressed on activated platelets, selectin-E on activated endothelial cells, while selectin-L is constitutively present on leukocytes [32, 33]. Selectins may recognize the sialyl structures, mainly of the mucin type that are expressed on almost all cancer cells. A positive correlation between sialyl-Lewis x and poor prognosis in stomach, colon, lung, prostate and breast cancer was observed [32]. Interactions between selectins, cancer cells, platelets, leukocytes and endothelial cells were studied in mice with different degrees of selectin expression. L-selectin deficiency was associated with metastasis reduction. However, the same effect was observed among mice with knock-out genes for both P- and L-selectins [34], so the two types of selectins may act synergistically. Heparin may inhibit both P- and L-selectins [35] as well as binding of sLe x [36]. A single heparin dose reduces metastases in the wild type to the level of the P-selectin knock-out gene population [37–39]. In the P- and L-selectin deficient mouse, heparin did not inhibit metastases [34], but repeated doses prolonged survival, suggesting that selectin inhibition is only one of the mechanisms of antineoplastic action of LMWH [40]. Tinzaparin was confirmed to inhibit selectins most effectively among the LMWH [41].



Angiogenesis



Heparin leads to the stabilization of proangiogenic growth factors stored in the extracellular matrix, of which the most important are VEGF and FGF-2. In an experimental model of human colon cancer, tinzaparin administration 24 hours after angiogenesis stimulation by VEGF led to a decrease of the angiogenic index to the control level [42]. The anti-angiogenic effect of LMWH was also studied in vitro on human umbilical vein endothelial cells. LMWH inhibited tubule formation, in a dose-dependent manner [43].

In the literature available, one example of a proangiogenic effect of LMWH in vivo was found. In this study angiogenesis to the rat mesentery assays was induced by intraperitoneal injection of very low doses of VEGF. Dalteparin and epirubicin were administered separately or in combination by subcutaneous infusion for 14 consecutive days. Dalteparin significantly stimulated angiogenesis in an inversely dose-dependent manner, epirubicin did not significantly affect it, and concurrent treatment with dalteparin and epirubicin significantly inhibited angiogenesis, which suggest a complex drug effect [44].



Immunology



Another explanation of these anti-cancer properties may be immunomodulation. LMWH enhance the activity of natural killers. Heparins act through tumor necrosis factor and interferon activity stimulation [45]. They may also inhibit the activation of leukocytes, complement system and complement-dependent inflammation. Heparins contribute to neutrophil extravasation and they interfere with free oxygen radical production in neutrophils [46].



Heparinase – potential target



Another possible mechanism of the antineoplastic effect of LMWH is the inhibition of heparinase, which may facilitate stromal invasion by cancer cells. Heparins inhibit heparinase mRNA and activity in metastatic lung cancer in vivo in rats [47]. The elevated serum and urinary level of heparinase was confirmed among patients with aggressive cancer at advanced stages [48]. The heparinase activity correlates with the metastatic potential of melanoma B16 and Epstein lymphoma in animal models [49,50].

Heparinase may also, independently of its enzymatic properties, facilitate Akt-dependent endothelial cell invasion and migration, and may upregulate VEGF gene expression through Src activation [51].



Other possible mechanisms



LMWH stop cell proliferation by inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase in the cancer endothelium [52]. Under certain experimental conditions, heparin may also induce apoptosis and differentiation of neoplastic cells. Additionally, heparin regulates the expression of certain oncogenes, including c-myc and c-fos [53].



Targeted antineoplastic effect of LMWH?



The specific mechanism of the antineoplastic effect of LMWH has not yet been clearly determined. Further laboratory and clinical trials are required in order to determine whether there is one mechanism responsible for this antitumor impact for all cancer types, or if some mechanisms are special for selected tumors. Surely, some processes are universal for the majority of malignancies, for instance the role of chemokines in metastasis formation [26]. Therefore, it seems that the effect of LMWH on them could also be present in all malignancies.



LMWH as cancer progression stimulants



Apart from the described theories of the antineoplastic effect of LMWH, there is still some risk of cancer promotion by anticoagulants. It could happen by immunomodulation [46] or by promotion of angiogenesis [44], as described above. Further research is still required.

In vitro and in vivo studies

The antineoplastic properties of LMWH were confirmed in in vivo trials on animals. The effect of tinzaparin on lung metastases of melanoma B16 was studied in a mouse model. A single, subcutaneous drug dose before the cancer cell inoculation reduced metastatic tumor formation by 89% in comparison to the control. Repeated tinzaparin administration once a day for 14 days before the cancer cell infusion caused a 96% reduction of the frequency of lung tumors. No severe adverse effects were observed [54].

In order to assess the influence of LMWH on the glycocalyx, enoxaparin was administered intravenously to mice deprived of syndecan-1, the lack of which disturbs the structure of the glycocalyx, and to the wild type after cancer cell inoculation. Almost complete elimination of metastatic tumors was observed in the wild type, and a lower reduction in the knock-out mice [30].

As heparin administration may cause bleeding, its derivates characterized by no anticoagulatory properties were generated. Such substances – N-acetylheparin, reduced oxyheparin and N-acetyl-reduced oxyheparin – possess anti-heparinase and anti-metastatic properties, although lower than heparin [55, 56]. This suggests that heparins with no anticoagulatory properties could become new anti-tumor drugs, individually or in combination with standard chemotherapy and without the risk of bleeding.

For reasons of expediency, orally active heparin derivatives may prove beneficial in oncological treatment. The antineoplastic effect of conjugates of heparin with liposomes as well as heparins covered with proabsorbant substances were studies in vitro and in vivo [57]. In an in vivo study in mouse, liposomic heparins were administered 20 minutes before and for 14 days after B16F10 melanoma cell inoculation. The liposomic heparins dose-dependently reduced the number of lung metastases 2- and 5-fold, when administered both intravenously and orally. This suggests that orally administered heparins may become standard in oncological treatment [57].

Clinical trials

Clinical trials concerning the problem described may be divided into two main groups. The first concerns patients with cancer selected from the group with established VTE treated with anticoagulants. The primary outcome is the pharmacokinetics of anticoagulants and the overall survival is the secondary one. The second branch of studies includes trials on patients with cancer without established VTE.

ASCO carried out a metaanalysis and systemic review of randomized clinical trials concerning the effectiveness and safety of trials with anticoagulants on patients with cancer without VTE. In 11 studies, a significant decrease in 1-year overall mortality was observed. The relative risk (RR) was 0.905 (95% CI: 0.847–0.967; P 5.003) for all anticoagulants and 0.877 (95% CI: 0.789–0.975; P 5.015) for LMWH [58]. Descriptions and results of the trials available are shown in Table 2.

The studies described, however promising they seem, are limited due to the number of patients analyzed, their heterogeneity, diversity of prognostic factors, outdated protocol of chemotherapy and limited data on the frequency of adverse effects. There are expectations for the results of the FRAGMATIC trial (Fragmin® added to standard therapy in patients with lung cancer) [53]. It is a randomized, multicentre phase III trial assessing the effect of dalteparin added to standard treatment for 24 weeks for patients with small or non-small cell lung cancer. The primary completion date for 2200 patients should be August 2012. FRAGMATIC’s results may prove crucial in creating new recommendations for preventive administration of LMWH in oncological treatment.

The MALT (Malignancy and Low Molecular Weight Heparin Therapy) study included patients with advanced solid tumors of different types who were randomly assigned to the group receiving nadroparin or placebo for 6 weeks. After a year an overall survival benefit was observed among the nadroparin group. It was the first randomized, placebo-controlled study to observe a survival benefit of LMWH in the study population as a whole [59].

Another randomized clinical trial was carried among cancer patients treated with dalteparin for deep venous thrombosis either for 6 months or initially only. Mortality was decreased in the dalteparin group among patients with limited disease, but not in the group with metastases [60].

The results of trials designed for patients with cancer without VTE are also promising. A randomized clinical trial included patients with small cell lung cancer, treated with either chemotherapy alone, or with LMWH. The mean progression-free survival was significantly longer for the group with additional administration of LMWH. A survival benefit was observed both for patients with limited and those with metastatic disease [63].

The available studies do not permit analyses of the influence on cancer type [58]. It was suggested that the beneficial effect of LMWH on mortality is more likely for patients with early-stage cancer or with a more favorable prognosis than those with advanced disease [60].

Summary

There is strong evidence that the coagulation cascade plays an important role in cancer metastasis and angiogenesis. The anti-tumor effect of heparins, particularly LMWH, has been confirmed. These anticoagulants inhibit cancer cell growth and metastasis formation in several ways.

Differences between the antineoplastic properties of LMWH heparins were described. In the studies analyzed, tinzaparin was often used as a representative of heparins. This may be related to its better vascular distribution and longer half-life than other LMWH [66–69].

Despite positive results of the in vitro, in vivo and clinical studies, international societies of clinical oncology do not currently recommend LMWH administration for improving survival. Large clinical trials are still necessary.

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Address for correspondence



Justyna Bochenek


Department of Clinical Oncology

Krakow University Hospital

Sniadeckich 10

31-531 Krakow, Poland

e-mail: bochenekjm@gmail.com



Submitted: 26.03.2012

Accepted:  7.05.2012
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