| Literature DB >> 20130818 |
Lyndsay J Willmott1, John P Fruehauf.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is the most common cause of mortality of tumors from gynecologic origin and is often diagnosed after patients have already progressed to advanced disease stage. The current standard of care for treatment of ovarian cancer includes cytoreductive surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy. Unfortunately, many patients will recur and ultimately die from their disease. Targeted therapies have been evaluated in ovarian cancer as a method to overcome resistant disease. Angiogenesis inhibitors have shown success in many tumor types and have also demonstrated promise in trials involving patients with ovarian cancer. PARP inhibitors may be potentially active agents in patients with BRCA-associated ovarian cancer. Trials that have evaluated combinations of targeted agents have often revealed untoward toxicities, thus tempering enthusiasm for this approach.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20130818 PMCID: PMC2814233 DOI: 10.1155/2010/740472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Results of three pivotal trials evaluating bevacizumab in ovarian cancer. Burger et al. and Cannistra et al. evaluated bevacizumab as a single agent whereas Garcia et al. evaluated bevacizumab with low-dose metronomic oral cyclophosphamide. All studies were performed in patients with recurrent disease.
| Author | Progression free survival | Overall survival | Bowel perforation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burger et al. | 3.4 months | 7.29 months | 0% |
| Cannistra et al. | 4.4 months | 10.7 months | 11.4% |
| Garcia et al. | 7.2 months | 16.9 months | 5.7% |
Review of studies of antiangiogenic agents in recurrent or persistent ovarian cancer. RR: response rate, HTN: hypertension, RF: renal failure, P/S: platinum-sensitive, P/R: platinum resistant. *2 confirmed and one unconfirmed partial response. **1 unconfirmed partial response.
| Agent | Authors | RR | Toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|
| VEGF trap | Tew et al. | 5/45 partial | HTN, proteinuria, encephalopathy, RF |
| Cediranib | Hirte et al. | P/S: 3/17 partial* | Diarrhea, HTN, fatigue, anorexia |
| P/R: 1/24 partial** |
Review of drugs in the epidermal growth factor receptor family that have been evaluated in ovarian cancer. RR: response rate, SD: stable disease, HTN: hypertension.
| Agent(s) | Authors | RR | SD | Toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gefitinib | Schilder et al. | 1/27 | Dermatologic, diarrhea | |
| Gefitinib + tamoxifen | Wagner et al. | 0/56 | 16/56 | Diarrhea, skin rash |
| Erlotinib | Gordon et al. | 2/34 partial | 15/34 | Rash, diarrhea |
| Erlotinib + bevacizumab | Nimeiri et al. | 1/13 complete | 7/13 | Anemia, nausea, vomiting, HTN, diarrhea, 2 fatal GI perforations |
| 1/13 partial | ||||
| Transtuzumab | Bookman et al. | 1/41 complete | ||
| 2/41 partial | ||||
| Pertuzumab | Gordon et al. | 5/107 partial | 8/107 | Diarrhea |
Review of multikinase inhibitors that have been studied in ovarian cancer. RR: response rate, SD: stable disease, HTN: hypertension, HFS: hand-foot syndrome.
| Agent(s) | Authors | RR | SD | Toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sorafenib | Matei et al. | 2/59 partial | 20/59 | Rash, GI, cardiovascular, metabolic, pulmonary |
| Sorafenib + bevacizumab | Azad et al. | 6/13 partial | HTN, diarrhea, HFS, thrombocytopenia, proteinuria, fistula | |
| Sorafenib + gemcitabine | Welch et al. | 6/18 partial | 10/18 | Lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, HTN, HFS, pain, neutropenia, hypokalemia |
| Imatinib | Coleman et al. | 0/12 | 4/12 | Fatigue, nausea/vomiting, rash, neutropenia |
| Imatinib | Alberts et al. | 0/19 | Hematologic, metabolic | |
| Imatinib | Schilder et al. | 1/56 complete | Neutropenia, GI, dermatologic, pain, electrolyte disturbances |
Figure 1Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase is involved in base excision repair of DNA single-strand breaks. If PARP is inhibited, these breaks can accumulate, potentially leading to double-strand breaks. These double-strand breaks are normally repaired by error-free homologous recombination, of which BRCA1 and BRCA2 proteins are involved. If these proteins are affected by somatic mutation or epigenetic silencing, eventual chromosomal instability and cell death can be seen.