| Literature DB >> 28656259 |
Abstract
Osteosarcomas (OS), especially those with metastatic or unresectable disease, have limited treatment options. The greatest advancement in treatments occurred in the 1980s when multi-agent chemotherapy, including doxorubicin, cisplatin, high-dose methotrexate, and, in some regimens, ifosfamide, was demonstrated to improve overall survival compared with surgery alone. However, standard chemotherapeutic options have been limited by poor response rates in patients with relapsed or advanced cases. It has been reported that VEGFR expression correlates with the outcome of patients with osteosarcoma and circulating VEGF level has been associated with the development of lung metastasis. At present, it seems to us that progress has not been made since Grignani reported a phase II cohort trial of sorafenib and sorafenib combined with everolimus for advanced osteosarcoma, which, in a sense, have become a milestone as a second-line therapy for osteosarcoma. Although the recognization of muramyltripepetide phosphatidyl-ethanolamine has made some progress based on its combination with standard chemotherapy, its effect on refractory cases is controversial. Personalized comprehensive molecular profiling of high-risk osteosarcoma up to now has not changed the therapeutic prospect of advanced osteosarcoma significantly. Thus, how far have we moved forward and what therapeutic strategy should we prefer for anti-angiogenesis therapy? This review provides an overview of the most updated anti-angiogenesis therapy in OS and discusses some clinical options in order to maintain or even improve progression-free survival.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28656259 PMCID: PMC5562076 DOI: 10.3892/or.2017.5735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Rep ISSN: 1021-335X Impact factor: 3.906
Figure 1.Common subtypes of VEGF and VEGFR and their main function.
Summary of the mechanisms of action of the anti-angiogenic compounds in preclinical experiments of osteosarcoma.
| Compound | Mechanism | Target (IC50, nM) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Endostatin | Internal fragment of the carboxy-terminus of collagen XVIII | A broad-spectrum endogenous antiangiogenic molecule | ( |
| MMPs | A family of enzymes that proteolytically degrade various components of the ECM | Non-specific | ( |
| PEDF | A secreted glycoprotein that is a non-inhibitory member of the serine protease inhibitor | Non-specific | ( |
| Bevacizumab | A humanized anti-VEGF antibody | VEGF-A(ED50 = 50 ng/ml) | ( |
| Pegaptanib | An anti-VEGF RNA aptamer | VEGF165 (0.75–1.4) | ( |
| VEGF Trap (Aflibercept) | A soluble receptor to VEGF | VEGF-A and VEGF-B (0.001), placental growth factor (0.045) | ( |
| Sorafenib | TKIs | VEGFR-2 ( | ( |
| Sunitinib | TKIs | VEGFR-1 ( | ( |
| Cediranib | TKIs | VEGFR-2 (<1), VEGFR-1 ( | ( |
| Pazopanib | TKIs | VEGFR-3 (≤3), VEGFR-1 ( | ( |
| Ramucirumab | A fully humanized MAb targeting to the extracellular VEGF-binding domain of VEGFR-2 | c-fms (146), VEGFR-2 (0.05) | ( |
| Dasatinib | TKIs | BCR/ABL (<1), c-kit ( | ( |
| Regorafenib | TKIs | VEGFR-1 ( | ( |
| Everolimus | mTOR signaling pathways | FKBP12 (1.6–2.4) | (15,87,124) |
| Imatinib | TKIs | v-Abl (600), c-kit ( | ( |
IC50, median inhibition concentration; concentration that reduces the effect by 50%. MMPs, metalloproteinases; PEDF, pigment epithelium-derived factor; ECM, extracellular matrix; TKIs, tyrosine kinase inhibitors; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin.
Clinical results of phase I trial with currently available anti-angiogenesis therapy on osteosarcoma.
| Drug | Targets | Combined with chemotherapy | The first author's surname | Year of publication | Trial sponsor | Clinical results | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gefitinib | EGFR | No | Daw | 2005 | COG | 6/6 PD | ( |
| Everolimus; Figitumumab | mTOR; IGF-IR | No | Quek | 2010 | Novartis and Pfizer | 3/3 SD | ( |
| Cediranib | VEGFR1-3 | No | Fox | 2010 | NIH, NCI | 1/4 PR | ( |
| R1507 | IGF-IR | No | Bagatell | 2010 | NIH | 2/3 SD | ( |
| Sunitinib | VEGFR; PDGFR; c-kit; Flt3, CSF-1 receptor, and RET | No | Dubios | 2011 | COG | 1/2 SD | ( |
| Cixutumumab | IGF-IR | No | Malempati | 2012 | COG | 3/3 PD | ( |
| Pazopanib | VEGFR1-3; PDGFR | No | Bender | 2013 | COG | 1/4 SD | ( |
| Sorafenib; Bevacizumab | VEGFR-2, Raf-1, B-Raf, c-kit, FGFR-1, FLT-3; VEGF-A | Low-dose cyclophosphamide | Navid | 2013 | Novartis and Pfizer | 2/2 SD | ( |
Clinical responses were defined as described in the referred studies. CBR, clinical benefit response; CR, complete response; PR, partial response; MR, minor response; SD, stable disease (for at least 8 weeks); PD, progressive disease (no response). COG, Children's Oncology Group; NIH, National Institutes of Health; NCI, National Cancer Institute; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin signaling pathways; IGF-IR, type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor.
Summary of Phase II trial results of currently available anti-angiogenesis therapy for osteosarcoma.
| Drug | Combined with chemotherapy | Stage | The first author's last name | Year of publication | Trial sponsor | No. of patients | Clinical outcome | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sorafenib | No | Advanced | Grignani | 2011 | Italian Sarcoma Group | 35 | 4 months-PFS 46%; DR 4 months; ORR 14% | ( |
| Trastuzumab | Cytotoxic chemotherapy | Newly diagnosed, high-grade metastatic | Ebb | 2012 | COG | 41 | 30 months-EFS 32%; 30 months-OS 50%; without significant difference comparing with control group | ( |
| Sirolimus | Cyclo-phosphamide | Advanced | Schuetze | 2012 | Michigan University | 5 | ORR 0%; 4 months-PFS 30% (combined with other sarcoma) | ( |
| Cixutumumab and temsirolimus | No | Advanced | Schwartz | 2013 | MSKCC fund | 24 | ORR 13%; median PFS 6 weeks | ( |
| Cixutumumab | No | Advanced | Weigel | 2014 | COG | 11 | ORR 0%; 1/11 SD for 140 days | ( |
| R1507 | No | Advanced | Pappo | 2014 | SARC | 38 | ORR 2.5%; DR: 12 weeks; 12 weeks-PFS 17% | ( |
| Sorafenib; Everolimus | No | Advanced | Grignani | 2015 | Italian Sarcoma Group | 38 | 6 months-PFS 45%; DR 5 months; ORR 10% | ( |
| Cixutumumab; Temsirolimus | No | Advanced | Wagner | 2015 | COG | 11 | ORR 0% | ( |
| Dasatinib | No | Advanced | Schuetze | 2016 | SARC | 46 | ORR 6.5%; DR 5.7 months; 2 years-OS 15% | ( |
PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; ORR, overall response rate, defined as complete responses (CRs) + partial responses (PRs) + MRs; DR, duration of response; COG, Children's Oncology Group; ACS, American Cancer Society; SARC, Sarcoma Alliance for Research Through Collaboration Study; MSKCC, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.