| Literature DB >> 34123809 |
Agnese Montanino1, Anna Manzo1, Guido Carillio2, Giuliano Palumbo1, Giovanna Esposito1, Vincenzo Sforza1, Raffaele Costanzo1, Claudia Sandomenico1, Gerardo Botti3, Maria C Piccirillo4, Priscilla Cascetta5, Giacomo Pascarella3, Carmine La Manna1, Nicola Normanno4, Alessandro Morabito1.
Abstract
Inhibition of angiogenesis has been demonstrated to be an efficacious strategy in treating several tumors. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is the most important protein with proangiogenic functions and it is overexpressed in small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Bevacizumab, a monoclonal antibody directed against VEGF, showed a promising activity in combination with etoposide and cisplatin as first-line treatment of patients with extended stage (ES)-SCLC and two randomized studies confirmed that bevacizumab improved PFS, but failed to prolong OS. Instead, disappointing results have been observed with endostar, sunitinib, sorafenib, vandetanib, and thalidomide in combination with chemotherapy in the first-line setting, with sunitinib in the maintenance setting, with sunitinib, cediranib and nintedanib as single agents or ziv-aflibercept in combination with topotecan in second-line setting. Only anlotinib improved OS and PFS as third-line therapy in Chinese patients with SCLC, and it was approved with this indication in China. Future challenges are the evaluation of the role of angiogenesis inhibitors in combination with immune- checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy in SCLC patients and the identification of predictive biomarkers of response to both agents.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; anlotinib; bevacizumab; small cell lung cancer; vascular endothelial growth factor
Year: 2021 PMID: 34123809 PMCID: PMC8195287 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.655316
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Bevacizumab in ES-SCLC.
| Author | Regimen | Patients | ORR (%) | Median TTP/PFS (months) | Median OS (months) | 1-year OS (%) | Grade 3-4 toxicity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CaIB | 51 | 84 | 9.1 | 12.1 | 51 | Thrombocytopenia (53), fatigue (31), dehydration (26), diarrhea (21), hyperglycemia (21), pain (21) | |
| CEB | 63 | 63.5 | 4.7 | 10.9 | 38.1 | Neutropenia (57.8), thrombocytopenia (14.1), fatigue (14.1) | |
| CIB | 72 | 75 | 7.0 | 11.6 | 43.8 | Neutropenia (25), diarrhea (16), dehydration (12), thrombocytopenia (10), fatigue (10), nausea (10) | |
| Ca/CEB vs Ca/CEP | 102 | 58 vs 48 | 5.5 vs 4.4 | 9.4 vs 10.9 | – | Neutropenia (35), pneumonia (5.9), dyspnea (3.9), thrombocytopenia (4), hypertension (5.9) | |
| CT vs CT + B | 147 | 89.2 vs 91.9, p=1.00 | 5.5 vs 5.3, p=0.82 | 13.3 vs 11.1, p=0.80 | – | Hypertension (40), thrombosis (11) | |
| CEB vs CEP | 204 | 58.4 vs 55.3, p=0.657 | 6.7 vs 5.7, p=0.03 | 9.8 vs 8.9, p=0.11 | 37 vs 25 | Neutropenia (46.3), fatigue (8.4), hypertension (6.3), thrombosis (5.3) |
Ca, carboplatin; C, cisplatin; I, irinotecan; E, etoposide; B, bevacizumab; P, placebo; CT, chemotherapy chosen by each center, cisplatin etoposide or cisplatin-cyclophosphamide-epidoxorubicin-etoposide.
Other angiogenesis inhibitors in SCLC.
| Author | Regimen | Setting | Patients | ORR (%) | Median TTP/PFS (months) | Median OS (months) | 1-year OS (%) | Main toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aflibercept + topo vs topo | Pl-sensitive Pl-refractory | 83 | 2 vs 0 | 1.8 vs 1.3 | 6 vs 4.6 | – | Fatigue, gastrointestinal, bleeding, pulmonary | |
| 106 | 2 vs 0 | 1.4 vs 1.4 | 4.6 vs 4.2 | – | ||||
| CE + endostar | First line | 33 | 69.7 | 5.0 | 11.5 | 38.1 | Fatigue, nausea, diarrhea, anorexia, mucositis | |
| CBDCA-VP16 + endostar vs CBDCA-VP16 | First line | 140 | 75.4 vs 66.7 | 6.4 vs 5.9 | 12.1 vs 12.4 | 50.0 vs 54.6 | Neutropenia, anemia, weakness, vomiting | |
| Vandetanib vs Placebo | Maintenance | 107 | – | 2.7 vs 2.8 | 10.6 | – | Gastrointestinal, rash, QT prolongation | |
| Pl +E + vandetanib vs Pl+E | First line | 74 | 50 vs 65 | 5.62 vs 5.68 | 13.24 vs 9.23 | – | Cardiac, hyperglycemia, hypertension | |
| Sunitinib | Second line | 25 | 9% | 1.4 | 5.6 | 21 | Thrombocytopenia, asthenia, neutropenia | |
| Sunitinib | Maintenance | 16 | – | 6.2* | 8.2* | – | Thrombocytopenia, fatigue, muscle weakness, hypothyroidism | |
| Sunitinib | Maintenance | 17 | – | 7.6* | 54 | Thrombocytopenia, anemia, vomiting, fatigue, pain, dehydration | ||
| Sunitinib vs placebo | Maintenance | 85 | – | 3.7 vs 2.1 | 9 vs 6.9 | 62.6 vs 43.9 | Fatigue, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia | |
| CE plus concurrent and sequential sorafenib | First line | 18 | 47 | – | 7.4 | 25 | Fatigue, anorexia, rash, diarrhea, neutropenia, weight loss, bleeding | |
| Cediranib | Second line | 25 | 0 | 2 | 6 | – | Fatigue, diarrhea, hypertension, proteinuria, elevated liver enzymes | |
| Nintedanib | Second line | 24 | 5 | 1 | 9.8 | – | Elevated liver enzymes, anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, anorexia, fatigue, diarrhea, vomiting | |
| Thalidomide | Maintenance | 30 | – | 2.8 | 12.8* | 51.7* | Neuropathy, constipation, fatigue, rash, dyspnea pulmonary embolism | |
| CT+ thalidomide followed by thalidomide | First line and maintenance | 25 | 68 | 8.3 | 10.1 | 42 | Nausea, anorexia, drowsiness, rash | |
| PCDE + thalidomide vs PCDE + placebo | First line | 119 | 87 vs 84 | 6.6 vs 6.4 | 11.7 vs 8.7 | 49 vs 30 | Neutropenia, anemia, neuropathy, constipation | |
| Ca + E + thalidomide vs Ca + E +placebo | First line | 724 | 74 vs 72 | 7.6 vs 7.6 | 10.1 vs 10.5 | 37 vs 41 | Thrombosis, rash, constipation, neuropathy | |
| Anlotinib vs placebo | Third line | 120 | 71.6 vs 13.2^ | 4.3 vs 0.7 | 7.3 vs 4.9 | – | Hypertension, anorexia, fatigue, elevation of liver enzymes, bleeding, | |
| Apatinib | Third-fourth line | 40 | 17.5% | 3.0 | 5.8 | – | Hypertension, hand-foot syndrome, increased GGT° | |
| Apatinib | Third-fourth line | 22 | 13.6% | 5.4 | 10.0 | – | Hypertension, proteinuria | |
| Apatinib + camrelizumab | Second-line | 47 | 34% | 3.6 | 8.4 | Hypertension, decreased platelet count, hand-foot syndrome |
Topo, topotecan; Pl, platinum; E, etoposide; C, cisplatin; Ca, carboplatin; PCDE, etoposide, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide, epidoxorubicin.
* From the start of chemotherapy.
^ Disease control rate.
°Gamma-glutamyltransferase.
Figure 1Interactions between angiogenesis and immune-checkpoint inhibitors. MDSC, myeloid-derived suppressor cell; TREG, T regulatory cells; iDC, inhibitory dendritic cells; TAM, tumor-associated macrophages.
Ongoing trials with angiogenesis inhibitors in ES-SCLC.
| Trial | Phase | Setting | Pts | Treatment | Primary end points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase II/III | Second or subsequent line | 40 | Anlotinib + sintilimab | PFS | |
| Phase III | First line | 738 | Anlotinib + Carboplatin + Etoposide + TQB2450 vs Anlotinib + Carboplatin + Etoposide + Placebo vs Carboplatin + Etoposide | PFS; OS | |
| Phase III | Second line | 184 | Anlotinib + topotecan vs placebo + topotecan | PFS | |
| Phase III | First line | 100 | Apatinib + etoposide + cisplatin vs placebo + etoposide + cisplatin | PFS | |
| Phase III | First line | 45 | Apatinib + etoposide + cisplatin + camrelizumab | 1 year OS | |
| Phase II/III | First line | 313 | Lucitanib + carboplatin + etoposide vs Placebo + Carboplatin + Etoposide | AE (phase 2); PFS (phase 3) | |
| Phase II | First line, maintenance | 33 | Vorolanib + atezolizumab after 3 or 4 cycles of carboplatin + etoposide + atezolizumab | PFS |