As mentioned in prior posts, the anti-angiogenic monoclonal antibody Avastin (bevacizumab) is now approved in first-line treatment of advanced NSCLC in combination with carboplatin/paclitaxel chemotherapy. Among the very interesting questions is whether Avastin should be added with other active drugs for NSCLC. Most of us in the field strongly suspect that the survival benefit from Avastin will also be the case with other types of therapy, but we’re only starting to get the evidence to address this. Continue reading →
As we established several years ago that it is indeed possible to do clinical trials with more than 50 or even 100 patients with advanced BAC, we were also seeing that those first forays into advanced BAC with standard chemotherapy were somewhat disappoingting (described further in another post). Fortunately, as it became clearer that we needed other options for advanced BAC, we started to see the first cases of patients with BAC who received Iressa on clinical trials who would sometimes have rapid and profound responses to this drug (below showing a difference after just 5 days):
The lung cancer physicians at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) reviewed the results from 139 patients who received the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) Iressa (gefitinib) as a single agent over a 5 year period and found that a diagnosis of BAC was among the strongest predictors for having a response to Iressa (abstract here).
Continue reading →
Although Avastin has been approved for first-line treatment of advanced NSCLC, at this point it cannot be universally employed. Patients with squamous cancers account for something in the range of 30% of patients, while patients with brain metastases amount to about 10-15% of patients. Another 5-10% may have hemoptysis, or the symptom of coughing up blood, and many others are on therapeutic blood thinners for a history of blood clots or atrial fibrillation. The trial of Avastin in lung cancer (called ECOG 4599) also did not include patients who had a marginal performance status, defined as being able to care for oneself but not able to work, and patients moderately limited in how active they can be, whether due to fatigue or shortness of breath or other issues, account for a lot of patients in the real world. We also still have trouble predicting which patients will have bleeding complications that can be serious or even fatal, even if only patients who meet the eligibility criteria are given Avastin. We are somewhat concerned about the risk of bleeding in patients with cavitary lesions (with an empty space in the middle, shown below)
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and those with central cancers near major blood vessels, but those patients would be eligible for Avastin according to the trial and the approval guidelines. Finally, while most oncologists expect that Avastin would give similar benefits if added to different chemo regimens, we don’t have proof of that yet, nor do we know with certainty that it is safe when combined with other chemo agents.
So trials are now being done to clarify whether Avastin can be given safely to patients with hemoptysis who have received radiation to treat that issue, and to patients who have squamous cancers who may have received prior treatment with radiation to minimize bleeding risk. Other trials are evaluating Avastin in patients with treated brain metastases. Multiple trials are carefully assessing whether the patients with central cancers or cavitating tumors are at significantly greater risk for bleeding, and also will clarify whether women show a benefit with Avastin outside of the ECOG trial. Multiple ongoing trials are combining Avastin with other chemo drugs to ensure that it is safe in other regimens.
Avastin (bevacizumab), an antiangiogenic agent that works by blocking the blood vessel stimulating factor vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), has already been FDA approved and commercially available for colon cancer, but it has now been approved by the FDA for first-line treatment of non-squamous NSCLC in combination with standard chemo of carboplatin and paclitaxel (taxol). This is because the combination of chemo and Avastin was found in a large randomized trial publsihed in the New England Journal of Medicine (abstract here) that the combination improved survival when combined with chemo alone for patients with advanced/metastatic NSCLC who hadn’t received chemo before. This trial, with nearly 900 patients, compared carboplatin and paclitaxel (Carbo/Taxol) alone to the same two-drug chemo with Avastin every three weeks, and people who went through six cycles of chemo and Avastin without having progression of disease went on to receive Avastin alone as maintenance therapy until their cancer showed progression:
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