Abstract

SummaryAngiogenesis plays a pivotal role in normal ovarian physiology as well as in the formation and progression of ovarian cancer. Several well-designed phase II and III trials studied the efficacy of antiangiogenic agents in advanced ovarian cancer. The results of these trials demonstrated significantly prolonged progression-free survival when antiangiogenic agents were used as a maintenance therapy. To date, no effect on overall survival could be ascertained. The most widely studied antiangiogenic agent, bevacizumab – a monoclonal humanized antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor – was effective in all phases of the disease (first-line therapy, platinum-sensitive and platinum-resistant recurrence). These results led to regulatory approval in many countries including the European Union. Other anti-VEGF agents such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors have not shown increased activity but increased toxicity relative to bevacizumab. Agents targeting angiopoietin-1 and -2 are in development and new combinations with PARP inhibitors and immune checkpoint inhibitors are studied. This review summarizes the current data and knowledge on the clinical use of antiangiogenic agents in advanced ovarian cancer.

Highlights

  • Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the leading cause of death from a gynecologic cancer

  • This review summarizes results of clinical trials investigating the efficacy and role of antiangiogenic therapies in advanced-stage EOC

  • Patients were randomized into three treatment groups: chemotherapy with paclitaxel plus carboplatin, for cycles 1–6 plus placebo in cycles 2–22; chemotherapy plus BEV in cycles 2–6 and placebo in cycles 7–22 (BEV initiation treatment arm); and chemotherapy plus BEV in cycles 2–22 (BEV maintenance treatment arm)

Read more

Summary

Alexander Reinthaller

Received: 7 June 2016 / Accepted: 16 August 2016 / Published online: 15 September 2016. Several well-designed phase II and III trials studied the efficacy of antiangiogenic agents in advanced ovarian cancer. The results of these trials demonstrated significantly prolonged progression-free survival when antiangiogenic agents were used as a maintenance therapy. The most widely studied antiangiogenic agent, bevacizumab – a monoclonal humanized antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor – was effective in all phases of the disease (first-line therapy, platinum-sensitive and platinum-resistant recurrence). These results led to regulatory approval in many countries including the European Union. Keywords Antiangiogenic therapies · Advanced ovar- Antiangiogenic agents in the adjuvant therapy of ian cancer · Recurrent ovarian cancer

Introduction
Findings
Recurrent EOC
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call