Abstract

Several preclinical studies suggested a potential benefit from combined treatment with inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and angiogenesis, both effective in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). In pretreated patients with advanced EGFR wild type NSCLC, bevacizumab plus erlotinib improved progression-free survival as second-line therapy in the BeTa study and as maintenance therapy in the ATLAS trial, although the benefit was modest and did not translate into an advantage in overall survival. Disappointing results were reported with oral VEGF inhibitors plus erlotinib in pretreated patients with EGFR wild type NSCLC. On the contrary, erlotinib plus bevacizumab or ramucirumab showed a clinically relevant improvement of progression-free survival in naïve patients with EGFR mutations, leading to the approval of these two regimens as first-line treatment of NSCLC patients with EGFR mutant tumors. Several clinical studies are evaluating the feasibility and activity of osimertinib plus bevacizumab or ramucirumab. However, limits that could affect its use in clinical practice are the need of an intravenous infusion for angiogenesis inhibitors, the increased incidence of treatment associated adverse events, the exclusion of patients with tumors located in central position or at risk of hemorrhage. The identification of predictive biomarkers is an important goal of research to optimize the combined use of these agents.

Highlights

  • Angiogenesis is a crucial process for the development of almost all tumors, including non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

  • In the first-line setting, bevacizumab plus erlotinib was even inferior to chemotherapy in epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) wild-type patients [25,26], confirming the evidence coming from the TORCH study that a strategy with an EGFR inhibitor is not recommended in unselected, naive, advanced NSCLC patients [43]

  • Negative results were reported with the combination of oral vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors and erlotinib in the second-line treatment of advanced NSCLC patients with EGFR wild type tumors: in particular, sunitinib plus erlotinib resulted in greater responses and longer progression-free survival (PFS), but this benefit was not clinically relevant and it was associated with more toxicity [32]

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Summary

Open Access Review

Angiogenesis and epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors in non-small cell lung cancer. Cite this article: Palumbo G, Esposito G, Carillio G, Manzo A, Montanino A, Sforza V, et al Angiogenesis and epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors in non-small cell lung cancer.

Introduction
Endothelial cell
Bevacizumab plus erlotinib
Bevacizumab alone
Oral VEGF inhibitors and erlotinib
Kitigawa et al II
Bevacizumab and erlotinib
Bevacizumab and other EGFR TKIs
Ramucirumab and erlotinib
Discussion and future perspectives
Findings
Osimertinib metastases
Full Text
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