| Literature DB >> 33854624 |
XinJie Chen1,2, Yu Gao1,2, GanLin Zhang2, BingXue Li1,2, TingTing Ma2, YunFei Ma2, XiaoMin Wang2.
Abstract
The anti-angiogenic drug Bevacizumab (Bev) is engaged in neoadjuvant therapy for non-metastatic breast cancer (NMBC). However, whether neoadjuvant Bev providing a greater benefit to patients is debatable. Our study aimed to review Bev's role in Neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) in NMBC and identify predictive markers associated with its efficacy by systemic review and meta-analysis. Eligible trials were retrieved from the Pubmed, Embase, and Cochrane Library, and random or fixed effects models were applied to synthesize data. Power of pCR to predict DFS or OS was evaluated by nonlinear mixed effect model. In NMBC, Bev significantly improved the rate of patients achieving pCR, but this benefit discontinued in DFS or OS. Biomarkers such as PAM50 intrinsic subtype, VEGF overexpression, regulation of VEGF signaling pathway, hypoxia-related genes, BRCA1/2 mutation, P53 mutation and immune phenotype can be used to predict Bev-inducing pCR and/or DFS/OS. Unfortunately, although patients with pCR survived longer than those without pCR when ignoring the use of Bev, but patients achieving pCR with Bev might survive shorter than those achieving pCR without Bev. Subgroup analyses found Bev prolonged patients' OS when given pre- and post-surgery. Lastly, adding Bev increased adverse effects. Overall, Bev offered limited effect for patients with NMBC in an unscreened population. However, in biomarkers - identified subgroup, Bev could be promising to ameliorate the prognosis of specific patients with NMBC. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Bevacizumab; neoadjuvant therapy; non-metastatic breast cancer.; prognostic biomarker; surrogate endpoint
Year: 2021 PMID: 33854624 PMCID: PMC8040714 DOI: 10.7150/jca.53303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
AEs related to Bev
| AE (Grade 3-4) | Num | Pts | Rate | OR | I2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension** | 7 | 4667 | 3.3% | 4.41(1.75,11.10) | 65.95% |
| Hand foot syndrome** | 6 | 4592 | 4.9% | 1.54(1.17,2.03) | 0 |
| Fatigue | 5 | 2546 | 9.7% | 1.18(0.91,1.54) | 0 |
| Diarrhea | 5 | 2676 | 4.7% | 0.76(0.53,1.10) | 10.75% |
| Nausea | 5 | 2676 | 4.6% | 1.02(0.71,1.46) | 0 |
| Vomiting | 5 | 2546 | 3.3% | 0.81(0.52,1.28) | 48.16% |
| Thromboembolic events | 5 | 3820 | 2.4% | 1.23(0.79,1.92) | 46.37% |
| Neutropenia* | 4 | 4274 | 53.3% | 1.18(1.03,1.36) | 0 |
| Febrile neutropenia** | 4 | 3612 | 10.1% | 1.91(1.53,2.39) | 0 |
| Mucositis** | 3 | 3540 | 6.4% | 4.77(2.27,10.06) | 56.12% |
| Headache** | 3 | 1338 | 2.6% | 4.83(1.98,11.80) | 0 |
| Dyspnea | 3 | 1471 | 1.5% | 2.22(0.87,5.65) | 0 |
| Surgical complications** | 3 | 1927 | 18.4% | 1.49(1.18,1.88) | 48.96% |
Legend and footnotes: Num= Number of included studies; Pts=Number of patients; Rate=Overall occurrence rate in all included patients; *: p<0.05; **: p<0.01.
Essential Characteristics for Eligible Studies
| Study | Country | Year* | Size | Population | Arms (number of patients) | Outcomes | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TORI B-02 | Ireland | 2005 | 90 | >3 cm, stage II/III, HER2- BC | DAC +Bev 7.5(n=28) | pCR, Toxicity | NR |
| TBCRC 002 | US | 2005 | 75 | Postmenopausal, stage II/III, HER2-/HR+ BC | Letrozole + Bev (n=50) | pCR, ORR, Toxicity, Surgery* | NR |
| NSABP B-40 | US | 2006 | 1206 | T1c-3, N0-2a, M0, HER2- BC | D→AC(n=199)/D+ Bev→ AC+ Bev(n=195) | pCR, ORR, Toxicity, DFS, OS | 4.7 years |
| Gaper Quinto | Germany | 2007 | 1948 | non-metastatic, HER2- BC, HR- or HR+ with positive nodes | EC→D (n=974) | pCR, ORR, Surgery, Toxicity, DFS, OS | 3.8 years |
| NeoAva | Norway | 2008 | 132 | ≥2.5cm, non-metastatic, HER2- BC | FEC→D/wP(n=66) | pCR, DFS | 5 years |
| SWOG S0800 | US | 2009 | 215 | stage IIB-IIIC, HER2- BC | nP +Bev→ ddAC(n=99) | pCR, EFS, OS, Safety | 3 years |
| CALGB 40603 | US | 2009 | 454 | stage II/III, TNBC | wP→ ddAC(n=115)/wP→ ddAC+ Bev(n=113) | pCR, Surgery, Safety, EFS, OS | 3 years |
| ARTemis | UK | 2010 | 800 | early-stage, HER2- BC | D→FEC(n=401) | pCR, Surgery, Safety, DFS, OS | 3.5 years |
| AVATAXHER | France | 2010 | 73 | early-stage, HER2+ BC, non-responders of chemotherapy | DT+ Bev(n=48) | pCR, Surgery, Safety | NR |
| ABCSG 32 | Australia | 2011 | 100 | early-stage, HER2+ BC | DT(n=25)/DT+ Bev (n=25) | bpCR, Safety | NR |
Legend and footnotes: Year: year of registration; D= docetaxel; AC= doxorubicin+ cyclophosphamide; Bev= Bevacizumab; X= capecitabine; G= gemcitabine; EC= epirubicin+ cyclophosphamide; F= 5-fluorouracil; →: followed by; wP= weekly paclitaxel; nP= nab-paclitaxel; dd= dose dense; Carbo= carboplatin; T= trastuzumab; N= non-pegylated liposomal doxorubicin; Surgery: method of surgery, lumpectomy or mastectomy; NR=not reported.
Biomarkers powered to predict Bev efficacy significantly at Baseline.
| Molecular characteristic | Population | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| High serum VEGF-A | HER2-/HR+BC | pCR |
| High serum VEGF-C | TNBC | pCR |
| Amplifications of VEGFA and TMEM100(an ALK1 receptor signaling‐dependent gene essential for vasculogenesis | HER2- BC | pCR |
| A set of five small RNAs associated with the regulation of VEGF pathway | HER2-/HR+ BC | pCR |
| Soluble carbonic anhydrase IX (sCAIX), upregulated in hypoxic conditions | HER2- BC | pCR, DFS |
| A small hypoxia signature | HER2- BC | pCR |
| BRCA1/2 mutations | TNBC | pCR, DFS |
| High proliferation, high p53 mutation and low IE (estrogen signaling) signatures | TNBC | pCR |
| Immune phenotype | HER2-/ER+BC | pCR |