Literature DB >> 30487637

Impact of primary tumour location on efficacy of bevacizumab plus chemotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer.

Fotios Loupakis1, Herbert I Hurwitz2,3, Leonard Saltz4, Dirk Arnold5, Axel Grothey6, Quynh Lan Nguyen7, Stuart Osborne7, Jonathan Talbot7, Stefanie Srock7, Heinz-Josef Lenz8.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Two first-line (1L) bevacizumab trials showed the prognostic value of primary tumour location in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). In this retrospective subgroup analysis, further analysis of the predictive effect of bevacizumab is presented.
METHODS: Patients with sidedness information from two randomised phase III studies of bevacizumab + chemotherapy (CT) vs CT as 1L mCRC treatment were analysed retrospectively.
RESULTS: Sidedness was determined in 1590 (27% right and 73% left) of 2214 patients. Progression-free survival was improved with bevacizumab + CT vs CT in right-sided (HR = 0.75; 95% CI 0.61, 0.93; p = 0.008) and left-sided (HR = 0.76; 95% CI 0.67, 0.86; p < 0.001) mCRC (pooled analysis). Similarly, overall survival was numerically improved with bevacizumab + CT vs CT in right-sided mCRC (HR = 0.82; 95% CI 0.65, 1.03; p = 0.085), and significantly improved in left-sided mCRC (HR = 0.85; 95% CI 0.74, 0.98; p = 0.028).
CONCLUSIONS: This analysis indicates that the effect of bevacizumab is independent of tumour location in mCRC.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30487637      PMCID: PMC6288128          DOI: 10.1038/s41416-018-0304-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


Background

Metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) is a heterogeneous disease increasingly characterised by chromosomal and molecular variations.[1] CRCs arising from the right or left side of the colon have markedly different clinical characteristics, incidence rates, and gene expression profiles.[2-5] Right-sided tumours are more likely to be characterised by BRAF mutations and high microsatellite instability, whereas left-sided tumours are commonly associated with chromosomal instability and overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptor ligands.[3] Right- and left-sided tumours also differ with regard to their microbiomes and host-related factors. Mucosal microbiota organisation has been shown to be a distinct feature of right-sided tumours,[6] and right-sided CRC is associated with older age and fewer surgeries for urgent indications.[7] Recent reports have focused on differences in prognosis and therapeutic outcome between tumours originating in the right and left side of the colon.[1,8,9] In a report of two randomised phase III mCRC trials with bevacizumab, overall survival (OS) was significantly longer in left-sided vs right-sided tumours (AVF2017g: hazard ratio (HR) = 0.55, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.43–0.70; NO16966: HR = 0.71, 95% CI = 0.62–0.82); these differences remained statistically significant within treatment subgroups (i.e., bevacizumab + chemotherapy (CT) or CT alone).[8] Given the fundamental differences in colon tumour sidedness, further understanding of the influence of sidedness from pivotal mCRC studies may add value to our current knowledge of optimal mCRC treatments. Here we present data on the benefit of adding bevacizumab to CT in patients with right- or left-sided tumours from the NO16966 and AVF2107g trials.

Materials and methods

Patient populations, treatment, and outcomes have been described in the AVF2107g and NO16966 studies.[10,11] Briefly, AVF2107g was a randomised, placebo-controlled trial of bevacizumab with irinotecan, bolus fluorouracil, and leucovorin in patients with previously untreated mCRC.[10] NO16966 was a randomised, noninferiority comparison of 5-fluorouracil, folinic acid, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX4) vs capecitabine plus oxaliplatin (XELOX), which was subsequently amended to a 2 × 2 factorial design with further randomisation to bevacizumab or placebo.[11] The aforementioned analysis by Loupakis et al.[8] which included data from AVF2107g and NO16966, evaluated the association between tumour location and survival in mCRC. Thus, all evaluable patients from AVF2107g and both part 1 (FOLOX4 vs XELOX) and part 2 (2 × 2 factorial plus bevacizumab) of NO16966 were included. However, since our objective was to compare the effect of bevacizumab + CT vs CT in right- and left-sided tumours, our analysis focuses on patients who were concurrently randomised to bevacizumab + CT. Patients who received CT only (FOLFOX4 or XELOX) from part 1 of NO16966 are excluded here. Sidedness of patients from NO16966 (NCT00069095) and AVF2107g (NCT00109070) was identified by Clinical Study Report information, including surgery procedural reports, updated from Loupakis et al.[8] Cancers proximal (i.e. occurring in the caecum, ascending colon, or transverse colon) or distal (i.e., occurring in the descending colon, sigmoid colon, or rectum) to the splenic flexure were defined as right- or left-sided, respectively. Tumours occurring precisely at the splenic flexure were assigned to the left-sided group. Patients with synchronous right- and left-sided tumours were excluded. Median progression-free survival (PFS) and OS, as well as corresponding 95% CIs, were estimated using Kaplan-Meier methods. Interaction tests were performed to determine whether treatment outcomes with bevacizumab + CT vs CT were different for patients with right- vs left-sided mCRC tumours. Unadjusted Cox proportional hazards models with right/left terms were used to compare survival outcomes between treatment groups and were correlated with efficacy endpoints; corresponding HRs and 95% CIs were estimated. In an overall treatment comparison for all patients with right- or left-sided tumours, tumour location was included as a covariate in the Cox model and interaction of treatment and tumour location was assessed. Overall response rate (ORR) was summarised as categorical data and compared between treatment groups by odds ratio (OR).

Results

Sidedness was determined in 1590 patients (27% right and 73% left) of 2214 patients total (Table 1). PFS was superior in patients treated with bevacizumb + CT vs CT in both right- (median PFS, 8.7 vs 5.8 months; HR = 0.75; 95% CI 0.61, 0.93; p = 0.008) and left-sided (median PFS, 10.0 vs 8.2 months; HR = 0.76; 95% CI 0.67, 0.86; p < 0.001) mCRC in this pooled analysis of NO16966 and AVF2107g (Fig. 1a, b). OS was also numerically improved with bevacizumab + CT vs CT in right-sided mCRC (median OS, 18.3 vs 15.6 months; HR = 0.82; 95% CI 0.65, 1.03; p = 0.085) and statistically significantly improved in left-sided mCRC (median OS, 23.5 vs 20.8 months; HR = 0.85; 95% CI 0.74, 0.98; p = 0.028) (Fig. 1c, d). The magnitude of PFS and OS benefit did not differ by tumour location.
Table 1

Survival outcomes

PFSOS
CTBev + CTCTBev + CT
Right side
NO16966
N107117107117
 Median (95% CI)7.6 (5.9, 9.9)8.6 (7.6, 10.2)17.7 (14.7, 21.0)20.1 (17.5, 23.5)
AVF2107
N103103103103
 Median (95% CI)5.4 (4.4, 5.8)8.7 (8.1, 10.6)13.6 (10.6, 16.7)15.9 (12.7, 19.6)
Pooled
N210220210220
 Median (95% CI)5.8 (5.4, 7.4)8.7 (8.2, 10.1)15.6 (13.6, 17.9)18.3 (16.0, 20.6)

 HR (95% CI)

p value

0.75 (0.61, 0.93)

0.008

0.82 (0.65, 1.03)

0.085

Left side
NO16966
N386380386380
 Median (95% CI)8.5 (8.0, 9.0)9.6 (9.2, 10.2)22.4 (20.5, 24.6)23.3 (21.2, 24.8)
AVF2107
N199195199195
 Median (95% CI)7.8 (5.7, 8.2)11.0 (10.2, 13.0)16.4 (15.3, 19.6)24.2 (19.9, NR)
Pooled
N585575585575
 Median (95% CI)8.2 (7.9, 8.5)10.0 (9.4, 10.8)20.8 (19.6, 22.4)23.5 (21.6, 24.8)

 HR (95% CI)

p value

0.76 (0.67, 0.86)

<0.001

0.85 (0.74, 0.98)

0.028

Bev bevacizumab, CI confidence interval, CT chemotherapy, HR hazard ratio, PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival

Fig. 1

Kaplan-Meier PFS and OS curves by tumour side for pooled population. a PFS for left-sided. b PFS for right-sided tumours. c OS for left-sided. d OS for right-sided. Bev bevacizumab, CT chemotherapy, OS overall survival, PFS progression-free survival

Survival outcomes HR (95% CI) p value 0.75 (0.61, 0.93) 0.008 0.82 (0.65, 1.03) 0.085 HR (95% CI) p value 0.76 (0.67, 0.86) <0.001 0.85 (0.74, 0.98) 0.028 Bev bevacizumab, CI confidence interval, CT chemotherapy, HR hazard ratio, PFS progression-free survival, OS overall survival Kaplan-Meier PFS and OS curves by tumour side for pooled population. a PFS for left-sided. b PFS for right-sided tumours. c OS for left-sided. d OS for right-sided. Bev bevacizumab, CT chemotherapy, OS overall survival, PFS progression-free survival To determine survival outcomes by baseline characteristics, patients were stratified by sex, age, race, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, presence of colon cancer, prior adjuvant CT, and prior radiation therapy. Compared with CT, bevacizumab + CT was associated with greater PFS and OS benefits for both right- and left-sided mCRC for most of these categories (Fig. 2).
Fig. 2

Forest plots for PFS and OS by tumour side for pooled population. a PFS for left-sided. b PFS for right-sided. c OS for left-sided. (d) OS for right-sided. Bev, bevacizumab; CT, chemotherapy; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival

Forest plots for PFS and OS by tumour side for pooled population. a PFS for left-sided. b PFS for right-sided. c OS for left-sided. (d) OS for right-sided. Bev, bevacizumab; CT, chemotherapy; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression-free survival In an overall treatment comparison for all patients with right- or left-sided tumours, tumour location was included as a covariate in the Cox model and interaction of treatment and tumour location was non-significant (PFS, p = 0.898; OS, p = 0.697). Cox model analysis also showed a non-significant (PFS, p = 0.980; OS, p = 0.879) interaction of bevacizumab use and availability of sidedness information (right/left vs. not classified). Interaction tests for PFS (p = 0.904) and OS (p = 0.689) indicated that treatment effect did not differ between patients based on tumour location. ORRs were similar with bevacizumab + CT vs CT in both right-sided (40.9% vs 42.4%; OR, 0.94; 95% CI 0.64–1.38; p = 0.770) and left-sided (54.4% vs 52.0%; OR, 1.10; 95% CI 0.88–1.39; p = 0.410) mCRC.

Discussion

Right-sided tumours have been widely associated with worse prognosis compared with left-sided tumours in mCRC.[8,12-14] Meta-analysis showed that left-sided CRC was associated with a 20% reduction in the risk of death vs right-sided CRC, independent of disease stage, ethnicity, and study type.[12] In our retrospective subgroup analysis of two randomised phase III mCRC studies, bevacizumab + CT improved survival vs CT alone, and the effect of bevacizumab was independent of tumour location. Similar improvements in PFS and OS were observed when patients were stratified according to baseline characteristics, such as age or race. In addition, OS was numerically improved with bevacizumab + CT vs CT in right-sided mCRC (median OS, 18.3 vs 15.6 months; p = 0.085) and significantly improved in left-sided mCRC (median OS, 23.5 vs 20.8 months; p = 0.028). However, it is likely that the smaller magnitude of the right-sided mCRC patient subset contributed to the non-significant p value for OS; therefore, these data suggest survival benefit overall and for both right- and left-sided tumours. This is the first analysis of two large phase III mCRC studies comparing bevacizumab + CT vs CT alone by tumour location. As such, it represents a more comprehensive analysis of the effect of bevacizumab by tumour location than previous reports, which have been mixed.[15-17] For instance, a retrospective analysis of mCRC patients treated with XELOX with or without bevacizumab suggested that bevacizumab may primarily benefit patients with left-sided primary tumours.[16] However, in another study, PFS was superior with bevacizumab + CT vs CT regardless of tumour site (HR = 0.46).[15] Our results build upon findings from the study by Loupakis et al.[8] which showed that primary tumour location has a strong prognostic effect on patients with mCRC irrespective of bevacizumab exposure. This study was a retrospective subgroup analysis, and was therefore limited to the patient populations investigated in the AVF2017g and NO16966 trials.[10,11] The tumour location of all patients was not identifiable; however, interaction tests showed no evidence of a relationship between the ability to identify the side and outcomes (PFS interaction, p = 0.980; OS interaction, p = 0.879). Although both AVF2107g and NO16966 investigated bevacizumab, the CT backbones were different, which may have influenced the pooled results in our study. Another limitation is that data on RAS mutation status could not be included in our analysis. Since these data were not collected for NO16966, samples are not currently available for testing; for AVF2107g, sidedness information was only available for 180 out of 230 patients for whom KRAS data were collected,[18] making the sample size too small for a valid analysis of the impact of treatment and RAS status. However, KRAS status has previously been shown not to be predictive for bevacizumab efficacy.[19] Recent evidence points to the value of defining the sublocation of mCRC tumours, within the right- or left-sided classification method. In a study of 1876 CRC patients, the prevalence of mutations in BRAFV600, TP53, PIK3CA, and other genes differed by sublocation within right- and left-sided tumours.[20] The authors concluded that the sigmoid-rectal region of the left side appears unique, and the transverse colon is distinct from other right-sided locations. In our study, the lack of data on precise tumour location could be seen as a limitation. However, given that bevacizumab efficacy is maintained in both right- and left-sided tumours, further analyses by tumour sublocation would likely not influence the data presented here. This retrospective exploratory subgroup analysis of two pivotal studies indicates the effect of bevacizumab is independent of tumour location in a non-biomarker selected mCRC population.
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Journal:  Anticancer Drugs       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 2.248

2.  Primary tumor location as a prognostic factor in metastatic colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Fotios Loupakis; Dongyun Yang; Linda Yau; Shibao Feng; Chiara Cremolini; Wu Zhang; Martin K H Maus; Carlotta Antoniotti; Christiane Langer; Stefan J Scherer; Thomas Müller; Herbert I Hurwitz; Leonard Saltz; Alfredo Falcone; Heinz-Josef Lenz
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Journal:  Dis Colon Rectum       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 4.585

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Authors:  Herbert I Hurwitz; Jing Yi; William Ince; William F Novotny; Oliver Rosen
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2009-01-14

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Authors:  M K Boisen; J S Johansen; C Dehlendorff; J S Larsen; K Osterlind; J Hansen; S E Nielsen; P Pfeiffer; L S Tarpgaard; N H Holländer; N Keldsen; T F Hansen; B B Jensen; B V Jensen
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2013-07-17       Impact factor: 32.976

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Authors:  E Missiaglia; B Jacobs; G D'Ario; A F Di Narzo; C Soneson; E Budinska; V Popovici; L Vecchione; S Gerster; P Yan; A D Roth; D Klingbiel; F T Bosman; M Delorenzi; S Tejpar
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2014-07-23       Impact factor: 32.976

8.  Bevacizumab in combination with oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy as first-line therapy in metastatic colorectal cancer: a randomized phase III study.

Authors:  Leonard B Saltz; Stephen Clarke; Eduardo Díaz-Rubio; Werner Scheithauer; Arie Figer; Ralph Wong; Sheryl Koski; Mikhail Lichinitser; Tsai-Shen Yang; Fernando Rivera; Felix Couture; Florin Sirzén; Jim Cassidy
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2008-04-20       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Bevacizumab plus irinotecan, fluorouracil, and leucovorin for metastatic colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Herbert Hurwitz; Louis Fehrenbacher; William Novotny; Thomas Cartwright; John Hainsworth; William Heim; Jordan Berlin; Ari Baron; Susan Griffing; Eric Holmgren; Napoleone Ferrara; Gwen Fyfe; Beth Rogers; Robert Ross; Fairooz Kabbinavar
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10.  Prognostic and Predictive Relevance of Primary Tumor Location in Patients With RAS Wild-Type Metastatic Colorectal Cancer: Retrospective Analyses of the CRYSTAL and FIRE-3 Trials.

Authors:  Sabine Tejpar; Sebastian Stintzing; Fortunato Ciardiello; Josep Tabernero; Eric Van Cutsem; Frank Beier; Regina Esser; Heinz-Josef Lenz; Volker Heinemann
Journal:  JAMA Oncol       Date:  2017-02-01       Impact factor: 31.777

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