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Vasoactive peptides associate with treatment outcome ofbevacizumab-containing therapy in metastatic colorectal cancer

Authors :
Anders Johnsson
Helga Hagman
Mattias Belting
J. Sundberg
Olle Melander
Pär-Ola Bendahl
Source :
Acta Oncologica. 56:653-660
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2017.

Abstract

Hypertension is a common early adverse event of anti-angiogenic treatment of cancer and may associate with treatment response. However, blood pressure measurement as a surrogate response biomarker has methodological limitations, and predictive biomarkers of angiogenesis inhibitors are lacking. In disease associated with hypertension, vasoactive peptides have been linked to cardiovascular pressure load. Here, we have explored potential associations between circulating levels of vasoactive peptides and tumor response during bevacizumab-containing treatment of colorectal cancer.Metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients with available best objective response (ORR) and time to tumor progression (TTP) data were included from a randomized clinical trial investigating maintenance therapy after first line chemotherapy plus bevacizumab. Midregional-pro-adrenomedullin (MR-proADM), midregional-pro-atrial-natriuretic-peptide (MR-proANP), and C-terminal-prepro-vasopressin (Copeptin) vasoactive peptide concentrations were measured in plasma at baseline and after 6 weeks of chemotherapy and bevacizumab treatment (n = 97). We determined associations among clinical outcome (ORR and TTP), peptide levels, and hypertension (NCI-CTCAE 4.0 criteria), using Spearman's test, multiple linear regression, and Mann-Whitney's test.Increasing levels of vasoactive peptides from baseline and after six weeks of treatment were associated with improved treatment outcome (MR-proADM: ORR, p = .0003; TTP, p = .05; MR-proANP: ORR, p = .05; TTP, p = .03; Copeptin: ORR, p = .10; TTP, p = .02). Patients with increasing levels of all three peptides (n = 28) versus increasing levels of one or two peptides (n = 59) showed a median TTP of 284 and 225 d, respectively (p = .02).Our results suggest that increasing systemic levels of vasoactive peptides associate with improved tumor response and TTP in mCRC patients treated with a bevacizumab-containing regimen. These findings support the proposed link between the tumor vasculature and the cardiovascular system of the host. This should motivate further studies that investigate the potential role of vasoactive peptides as a novel class of dynamic biomarkers in the treatment of cancer.

Details

ISSN :
1651226X and 0284186X
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Oncologica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b594ffec6b942528749026fb905a20d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186x.2017.1302098