| Literature DB >> 33182685 |
Tom Wei-Wu Chen1, Jessica Burns2, Robin L Jones3, Paul H Huang2.
Abstract
Angiosarcomas comprise less than 3% of all soft tissue sarcomas but have a poor prognosis. Most angiosarcomas occur without obvious risk factors but secondary angiosarcoma could arise after radiotherapy or chronic lymphedema. Surgery remains the standard treatment for localized angiosarcoma but neoadjuvant systemic treatment may improve the curability. For advanced angiosarcoma, anthracyclines and taxanes are the main chemotherapy options. Anti-angiogenic agents have a substantial role but the failure of a randomized phase 3 trial of pazopanib with or without an anti-endoglin antibody brings a challenge to future trials in angiosarcomas. Immune checkpoint inhibitors as single agents or in combination with oncolytic virus may play an important role but the optimal duration remains to be investigated. We also report the current understanding of the molecular pathways involved in angiosarcoma pathogenesis including MYC amplification, activation of angiogenic pathways and different molecular alterations that are associated with angiosarcomas of different aetiology. The success of the patient-partnered Angiosarcoma Project (ASCProject) has provided not only detailed insights into the molecular features of angiosarcomas of different origins but also offers a template for future fruitful collaborations between patients, physicians, and researchers. Lastly, we provide our perspective of future developments in optimizing the clinical management of angiosarcomas.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; angiosarcoma; chemotherapy; immunotherapy; molecular biology; radiation-associated sarcoma; soft tissue sarcomas
Year: 2020 PMID: 33182685 PMCID: PMC7696056 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12113321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Clinical trials investigating systemic treatment activity in angiosarcoma.
| Investigational Agent | Targeted Population | AS Specific | Single or Combo |
| Start Date | Expected Completion Date | Phase | NCT Identifier/EudraCT Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pazopanib | AS | Yes | Single | 30 | Nov 2011 | Jan 2019 | II | NCT01462630 |
| Regorafenib | AS | Yes | Single | 31 | Jun 2014 | Oct 2019 | II | NCT02048722 |
| Propranolol + metronomic cyclophosphamide | AS | Yes | Combo | 24 | Jan 2016 | Not provided | I/II | 2015-005177-21 |
| Oraxol (oral paclitaxel + HM30181) | AS, cutaneous | Yes | Single | 43 | Dec 2018 | Dec 2020 | I/II | NCT03544567/2019-002085-13 |
| Paclitaxel and avelumab | AS, metastatic | Yes | Combo | 32 | Jun 2018 | Nov 2022 | II | NCT03512834 |
| T-VEC | AS, skin | Yes | Single | 4 | Arp 2019 | May 2021 | II | NCT03921073 |
| Propranolol | AS, cutaneous and breast | Yes | Single | 14 | Dec 2019 | Dec 2021 | II | NCT04518124 |
| Paclitaxel + radiotherapy | AS, cutaneous | Yes | Combo | 19 | May 2019 | Dec 2021 | I/II | NCT03921008 |
| Paclitaxel + nivolumab | AS of skin, radiation-associated skin, and visceral | Yes | Combo | 90 | Sep 2020 | Sep 2023 | II | NCT04339738 |
| AGN2034 + AGEN 1884 | AS | Yes | Combo | 55 | Oct 2020 | Oct 2021 | II | NCT01042379 |
| Doxorubicin + dexrazoxane | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 73 | Feb 2016 | Oct 2023 | II | NCT02584309 |
| Nivolumab + ipilimumab | Rare cancers, including AS | No | Combo | 818 | Jan 2017 | Aug 2021 | II | NCT02834013 |
| T-VEC + pembrolizumab | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 60 | Mar 2017 | Mar 2021 | II | NCT03069378 |
| Sunitinib + nivolumab | STS and bone sarcoma, including AS | No | Combo | 270 | Mar 2017 | Sep 2022 | I/II | NCT03277924/2016-004040-10 |
| Ribociclib and doxorubicin | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 16 | Mar 2017 | Oct 2019 | I | NCT03009201 |
| L19TNF + doxorubicin vs. doxorubicin | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 102 | July 2017 | Not provided | III | 2016-003239-38 |
| Durvalumab + tremelimumab | Sarcoma, including AS | No | Combo | 62 | Aug 2017 | Aug 2020 | II | NCT02815995 |
| RP1 +/− pembrolizumab | Solid tumor, including AS | No | Combo | 293 | Aug 2017 | Not provided | I/II | 2016-004548-12 |
| Durvalumab + trememlimumab vs. doxorubicin | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 100 | Oct 2017 | Not provided | II | 2016-004750-15 |
| Eribulin | AS and EHE | No | Single | 16 | Jan 2018 | May 2021 | II | NCT03331250 |
| Atezolizumab + radiotherapy | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 69 | Feb 2018 | Not provided | II | 2016-005019-42 |
| SPM-011 + Boron Neutron Capture Therapy | AS and melanoma | No | Combo | 9 | Nov 2019 | Dec 2021 | NA | NCT04293289 |
| Cobimetinib + atezolizumab | STS, including AS | No | Combo | 80 | Oct 2019 | Not provided | I/II | 2019-000987-80 |
(last accessed 2020/10/30 from https://www.clinicaltrials.gov and https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu/. Keywords: angiosarcoma; recruitment status included “not yet recruiting”, “recruiting”, and “active, not recruiting.” for ClinicalTrials.gov and “Ongoing” for EU Clinical Trial Register). AS: angiosarcoma, EHE: epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, STS: soft tissue sarcoma, T-VEC: tamilogene laherparepvec.* The cabozantinib plus nivolumab arm enrolls patients who are refractory to paclitaxel.
Summary of the key molecular features of angiosarcoma, with the frequency of genomic alteration, and if known the biological and clinical consequences.
| Molecular Feature | Genomic Alteration | Frequency | Biological Consequence | Clinical Consequence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MYC transcription factor | 50–100% secondary AS; 7–8% primary AS [ | Hypothesised to promote the angiogenic phenotype through upregulation of miRNAs in the miR-17-92 cluster, leading to reduced expression of anti-angiogenic THBS1 and CTGF [ | − | |
| MYC overexpression | 17–24% primary AS [ | − | ||
| TP53 | 4–52% AS [ | Exact biological consequence in AS unknown. Animal models with TP53 alterations go on to develop AS [ | − | |
| Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) & VEGF receptor (VEGFR) signaling | 18–25% secondary AS [ | Uncontrolled VEGF/VEGFR signaling leads to dysregulated angiogenic activity, however exact mechanism in AS remains unknown. | − | |
| 0–33% AS; 70% breast primary AS [ | − | |||
| VEGF/VEGFR family overexpression | 94% AS (VEGF-A); 94% AS (VEGFR-1); 65% AS (VEGFR-2); 79% AS (VEGFR-3) [ | Potential prognostic value: lower VEGFR-2 expression associated with significantly poorer OS [ | ||
| Tyrosine kinase with Ig like and EGF domains (Tie) and Angiopoietin (Ang) signaling | Tie/Ang system overexpression | 68% AS (Tie-1); 80% AS (Tie-2); 86% AS (Ang-1); 42% AS (Ang-2) [ | Exact biological consequence in AS unknown. Increased signaling activity through the Tie/Ang system is likely to trigger a cascade of increased activity through the downstream FAK, MAPK, PKB/PI3K/mTOR axes [ | Potential prognostic value: lower Ang-1 expression associated with significantly poorer OS [ |
| Receptor-type tyrosine-protein phosphatase beta (PTPRB) | 26% secondary AS [ | Loss of function mutations are most commonly observed and are hypothesised to lead to unmodulated Tie-2 and VEGFR-2 signaling [ | − | |
| Phospholipase C gamma 1 (PLCG1) | 7–9% secondary AS; 30% cardiac primary AS [ | Mutation results in constitutively active PLCG1 leading to increased MAPK pathway signaling [ | − | |
| Capicua transcriptional repressor (CIC) | 8% AS; enriched for young primary AS patients [ | Exact biological consequence in AS unknown. CIC-rearrangements hypothesised to reduce CIC activity, leading to upregulation of CIC-target PEA3 family transcription factors [ | − | |
| 3% AS; enriched for primary AS cases with epithelioid histology [ | − | |||
| Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase subunit alpha (PIK3CA) | 21% AS; enriched for breast primary AS cases [ | Exact biological consequence in AS unknown, however activating mutations were observed, and likely lead to increased signaling activity. | Potential treatment option: subset of patients may respond to PI3Kalpha inhibition [ | |
| Tumour mutation burden (TMB) | High TMB | 21% AS; enriched for head, neck, face & scalp cases [ | Exact biological consequence in AS unknown. High TMB present alongside COSMIC UV signature [ | Potential treatment option: subset of patients may respond to immune checkpoint inhibition [ |