Bevacizumab May Differentially Improve Prognosis of Advanced Ovarian Cancer Patients with Low Expression of VEGF-A165b, an Antiangiogenic VEGF-A Splice Variant

  • Pauline Wimberger
  • Mara Julia Gerber
  • Jacobus Pfisterer
  • Kati Erdmann
  • Susanne Füssel
  • Theresa Link
  • Andreas du Bois
  • Stefan Kommoss
  • Florian Heitz
  • Jalid Sehouli
  • Rainer Kimmig
  • Nikolaus de Gregorio
  • Barbara Schmalfeldt
  • Tjoung-Won Park-Simon
  • Klaus Baumann
  • Felix Hilpert
  • Marcel Grube
  • Willibald Schröder
  • Alexander Burges
  • Antje Belau
  • Lars Hanker
  • Jan Dominik Kuhlmann

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Abstract

PURPOSE: The identification of a robust IHC marker to predict the response to antiangiogenic bevacizumab in ovarian cancer is of high clinical interest. VEGF-A, the molecular target of bevacizumab, is expressed as multiple isoforms with pro- or antiangiogenic properties, of which VEGF-A165b is the most dominant antiangiogenic isoform. The balance of VEGF-A isoforms is closely related to the angiogenic capacity of a tumor and may define its vulnerability to antiangiogenic therapy. We investigated whether the expression of VEGF-A165b could be related to the effect of bevacizumab in advanced ovarian cancer patients.

EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues from 413 patients of the ICON7 multicenter phase III trial, treated with standard platinum-based chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab, were probed for VEGF-A165b expression by IHC.

RESULTS: In patients with low VEGF-A165b expression, the addition of bevacizumab to standard platinum-based chemotherapy significantly improved progression-free (HR: 0.727; 95% CI, 0.538-0.984; P = 0.039) and overall survival (HR: 0.662; 95% CI, 0.458-0.958; P = 0.029). Multivariate analysis showed that the addition of bevacizumab in low VEGF-A165b-expressing patients conferred significant improvements in progression-free survival (HR: 0.610; 95% CI, 0.446-0.834; P = 0.002) and overall survival (HR: 0.527; 95% CI, 0.359-0.775; P = 0.001), independently from established risk factors.

CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate for the first time that bevacizumab may differentially improve the prognosis of advanced ovarian cancer patients with low expression of VEGF-A165b, an antiangiogenic VEGF-A splice variant. We envision that this novel biomarker could be implemented into routine diagnostics and may have direct clinical implications for guiding bevacizumab-related treatment decisions in advanced ovarian cancer patients.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1078-0432
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.11.2022

Comment Deanary

©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.

PubMed 36001383