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Role of vascular density and normalization in response to neoadjuvant bevacizumab and chemotherapy in breast cancer patients.

Authors :
Tolaney, Sara M.
Boucher, Yves
Duda, Dan G.
Martin, John D.
Seano, Giorgio
Ancukiewicz, Marek
Barry, William T.
Goel, Shom
Lahdenrata, Johanna
Isakoff, Steven J.
Yeh, Eren D.
Jain, Saloni R.
Golshan, Mehra
Brock, Jane
Snuderl, Matija
Winer, Eric P.
Krop, Ian E.
Jain, Rakesh K.
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America; 11/17/2015, Vol. 112 Issue 46, p14325-14330, 6p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Preoperative bevacizumab and chemotherapy may benefit a subset of breast cancer (BC) patients. To explore potential mechanisms of this benefit, we conducted a phase II study of neoadjuvant bevacizumab (single dose) followed by combined bevacizumab and adriamycin/cyclophosphamide/paclitaxel chemotherapy in HER2- negative BC. The regimen was well-tolerated and showed a higher rate of pathologic complete response (pCR) in triple-negative (TN)BC (11/21 patients or 52%, [95% confidence interval (CI): 30,74]) than in hormone receptor-positive (HR)BC [5/78 patients or 6% (95%CI: 2,14)]. Within the HRBCs, basal-like subtype was significantly associated with pCR (P = 0.007; Fisher exact test). We assessed interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) and tissue biopsies before and after bevacizumab monotherapy and circulating plasma biomarkers at baseline and before and after combination therapy. Bevacizumab alone lowered IFP, but to a smaller extent than previously observed in other tumor types. Pathologic response to therapy correlated with sVEGFR1 postbevacizumab alone in TNBC (Spearman correlation 0.610, P = 0.0033) and pretreatment microvascular density (MVD) in all patients (Spearman correlation 0.465, P = 0.0005). Moreover, increased pericyte- covered MVD, amarker of extent of vascular normalization, after bevacizumab monotherapy was associated with improved pathologic response to treatment, especially in patients with a high pretreatment MVD. These data suggest that bevacizumab prunes vessels while normalizing those remaining, and thus is beneficial only when sufficient numbers of vessels are initially present. This study implicates pretreatment MVD as a potential predictive biomarker of response to bevacizumab in BC and suggests that new therapies are needed to normalize vessels without pruning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
112
Issue :
46
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
111082075
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518808112