Anti-angiogenic treatments in metastatic colorectal cancer: Does a continuous angiogenic blockade make sense?

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TitreAnti-angiogenic treatments in metastatic colorectal cancer: Does a continuous angiogenic blockade make sense?
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuteursJary M, Borg C, Bouche O, Kim S, Andre T, Bennouna J
JournalBULLETIN DU CANCER
Volume102
Pagination758-771
Date PublishedSEP
Type of ArticleReview
ISSN0007-4551
Mots-clésAflibercept, anti-angiogenic, Bevacizumab, Colorectal cancer, maintenance therapy, regorafenib
Résumé

Ten years after the approval of bevacizumab in colorectal cancer patients, results from ML18147 and CORRECT studies have recently demonstrated the possibility to target angiogenesis in patients previously exposed to anti-VEGF. An increasing number of anti-angiogenic treatments ore now available, however, no biomarker has yet succeeded in rationalizing our therapeutic strategies. Nevertheless, several lessons have been learned from preclinical and pivotal clinical studies. The first clinical trials demonstrated a survival benefit, adding VEGFAtargeting monoclonal antibodies to chemotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer patients (AVF2107, ECOG 3200). Many phase III clinical trials confirmed the interest of this strategy, in combination with chemotherapies containing irinotecan, oxaliplatin, or with 5-fluorouracil in monotherapy. To date, such results have not been reproduced with tyrosine kinase inhibitors targeting the angiogenesis pathways, with an increasing rate of chemotherapy related toxicities. Clinical trials performed in the adjuvant setting (AVANT, NSABPC08) foiled to demonstrate any efficacy of the anti-VEGFA treatments on the micrometastatic disease, encouraging its prescription in the unresectoble cases. On the other hand, a continuous inhibition of angiogenesis during the course of the metastatic disease was shown to be feasible and to extend colon cancer patient's survival in two recent randomized trials. For these patients, the continuation of bevacizumab beyond progression in first line improves overall survivaL Lastly, results achieved by the CORRECT and CONCUR studies demonstrated that anti-angiogenics might be effective in colorectal cancers resistant to chemotherapy. This review presents the main results of preclinical and clinical studies sustaining the prescription of anti-angiogenics in metastatic colorectal cancers. The future challenge is to promote the development of biomorkers to enable the stratification of the different therapeutic strategies.

DOI10.1016/j.bulcan.2015.05.002