Antiangiogenic therapy-evolving view based on clinical trial results.
Affiliation
Department of Medical Oncology, Christie Hospital and University of Manchester, Wilmslow Road, Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre, Manchester M20 4BX, UK.Issue Date
2012-02-14
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Antiangiogenic therapies that target VEGF or its receptors have become a mainstay of cancer therapy in multiple malignancies. However, the clinical efficacy of these agents is less than originally anticipated and, in most settings, requires the addition of cytotoxic chemotherapy suggesting that, as for other targeted therapies, VEGF inhibitors will require selection of patient subpopulations to achieve maximal clinical benefit. Without the identification and use of predictive biomarkers for VEGF-targeted agents, and other agents that target the vasculature, further improvements in current clinical outcomes are unlikely. Exciting new data presented in 2011 at the ESMO conference showed that retrospective evaluation of plasma concentrations of VEGF-A predicted progression-free survival and/or overall survival benefit from bevacizumab in phase III trials in certain tumour types; prospective evaluation of the assay is required. This endeavour should be followed by further biomarker research, requiring inter-laboratory collaboration and high-quality, adequately powered clinical trials.Citation
Antiangiogenic therapy-evolving view based on clinical trial results. 2012,9:297-303 Nat Rev Clin OncolJournal
Nature Reviews Clinical OncologyDOI
10.1038/nrclinonc.2012.8PubMed ID
22330688Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1759-4782ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1038/nrclinonc.2012.8
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- Antiangiogenic therapy: impact on invasion, disease progression, and metastasis.
- Authors: Ebos JM, Kerbel RS
- Issue date: 2011 Mar 1
- Beyond bevacizumab: antiangiogenic agents.
- Authors: Rogosin S, Sandler AB
- Issue date: 2012 Sep
- Targeting the vasculature of tumours: combining VEGF pathway inhibitors with radiotherapy.
- Authors: Kanthou C, Tozer G
- Issue date: 2019 Jan
- Strategies for improving the clinical benefit of antiangiogenic drug based therapies for breast cancer.
- Authors: Kerbel RS
- Issue date: 2012 Dec
- Antiangiogenic therapy for high-grade glioma.
- Authors: Khasraw M, Ameratunga MS, Grant R, Wheeler H, Pavlakis N
- Issue date: 2014 Sep 22