| Literature DB >> 25678824 |
Jermaine Ig Coward1, Kathryn Middleton2, Felicity Murphy2.
Abstract
Epithelial ovarian cancer remains the most lethal gynecologic malignancy. During the last 15 years, there has been only marginal improvement in 5 year overall survival. These daunting statistics are compounded by the fact that despite all subtypes exhibiting striking heterogeneity, their systemic management remains identical. Although changes to the scheduling and administration of chemotherapy have improved outcomes to a degree, a therapeutic ceiling is being reached with this approach, resulting in a number of trials investigating the efficacy of targeted therapies alongside standard treatment algorithms. Furthermore, there is an urge to develop subtype-specific studies in an attempt to improve outcomes, which currently remain poor. This review summarizes the key studies with antiangiogenic agents, poly(adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) inhibitors, and epidermal growth factor receptor/human epidermal growth factor receptor family targeting, in addition to folate receptor antagonists and insulin growth factor receptor inhibitors. The efficacy of treatment paradigms used in non-ovarian malignancies for type I tumors is also highlighted, in addition to recent advances in appropriate patient stratification for targeted therapies in epithelial ovarian cancer.Entities:
Keywords: PARP inhibition; antiangiogenic therapy; cancer-related inflammation; high-grade serous; low grade ovarian cancer
Year: 2015 PMID: 25678824 PMCID: PMC4324539 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S52379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Key bevacizumab studies in epithelial ovarian cancer
| Trial or author | Setting | Phase | Size | Treatment groups | Results | Gastrointestinal perforation risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GOG | Recurrent disease | II | 62 | Single group: single agent, bevacizumab (15 mg/kg every 21 days) | PFS, 4.7 months | 0 |
| Cannistra et al | Recurrent disease | II | 44 | Single group: single agent, bevacizumab every 21 days | Partial response in 15.9% | 11.4% |
| GOG 218 | First line | III | 1,873 | Carboplatin/paclitaxel + | PFS group | a. 1.2% |
| ICON7 | First line | III | 1,528 | Carboplatin/paclitaxel ± bevacizumab, 7.5 mg/kg three times weekly | PFS, 20.3 versus 21.8 months with bevacizumab | 3/750 (<0.5%) control group versus 10/735 (1%) in bevacizumab group |
| OCEANS | Recurrent disease | III | 484 | a. Carboplatin/gemcitabine plus placebo | PFS | 2/242 in bevacizumab group versus 0 in nonbevacizumab group |
| AURELIA | Recurrent disease | III | 361 | Single-agent chemotherapy (liposome doxorubicin or topotecan or weekly paclitaxel) ± bevacizumab (10 mg/kg twice weekly or 15 mg/kg q 3/52) | 3.4 months PFS without bevacizumab versus 6.7 months with bevacizumab | 2.2% |
Abbreviations: GOG, Gynecologic Oncology Group; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; q 3/52, every 3 weeks.
Targeted therapeutics in type I epithelial ovarian cancer
| Histology | Genetic mutation | Targeted therapy | Size | Phase | Treatment arms | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low grade serous papillary | MAPK | Selumetinib (MEK1/2 inhibitor) | 52 | II | Selumetinib | 15% response rate. |
| Low grade endometrioid | CTNNB1 | No specific trials done in patients with endometroid histology mTOR trials may have clinical utility | na | na | na | na |
| Mucinous carcinoma | HER2 (20%) | Case reports of response to Trastuzumab | na | na | na | 3 patients with mucinous histology demonstrated response to trastuzumab |
| Clear cell carcinoma | ARID1A | Sunitinib | 2 | na | Sunitinib only arm | 2 patients with clear cell histology demonstrated response to sunitinib |
Abbreviation: na, not applicable.
PARP inhibitors in clinical development
| PARP inhibitor | Delivery | Development phase | Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Olaparib (AZD2281, KU-0059436) | Oral | I, II, III | AstraZeneca |
| Veliparaib (ABT888) | Oral | I, II, III | Abbott |
| Rucaparib (AGO14699, AG14447, PF-0136738) | Intravenous/oral | I, II, III | Clovis Oncology, Pfizer |
| Niraparib (MK4827) | Oral | I, II, III | Tesaro/Merck |
| BMN673 | Oral | I, II | Biomarin |
Abbreviation: PARP, Poly(adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase.