Physicians today have an abundance of drug therapies available to improve survival length for more advanced colorectal cancer patients.
Physicians today have an abundance of drug therapies available to improve survival length for more advanced colorectal cancer patients.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the Western world. Now the discovery of genetic biomarkers relevant to CRC means that targeted personalized medication is increasingly common. CRC affects approximately 150,000 patients and leads to over 52,000 deaths every year in the US alone. In the early stages, CRC can often be cured by surgery. It is in the more advanced, palliative cases that the abundance of drug therapies comes into play, according to Mayo Clinic oncologist Axel Grothey, MD. In his paper Medical treatment of advanced colorectal cancer in 2009 published this week in the journal Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology, Grothey details the interplay of therapies currently on offer.Oncologists now integrate conventional cytotoxic agents oxaliplatin and irinotecan (which directly fight tumor cells) with treatments such as bevacizumab and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) antibodies, cetuximab and panitumumab, as novel targeted agents into standard medical therapy. The result is that median overall survival in metastatic CRC now exceeds two years for the first time.
For decades, standard first-line therapy consisted of the drugs fluorouracil (5-FU) plus leucovorin, which helped just a fifth of patients to survive a median of one year. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the addition of oxaliplatin and irinotecan to the backbone of 5-FU and leucovorin led to dramatic improvement in median survival to nearly 24 months. Most recently, biologic agents such as bevacizumab, cetuximab, and panitumumab, have yielded even better results for many patients.
"It cannot be overemphasized that these significant improvements in outcome of patients with CRC are closely linked to the number of active drugs available to treat this disease," says Grothey. However, he adds that this treatment abundance also provides oncologists with specific challenges for managing palliative medical therapy in advanced CRC, particularly when they use targeted agents.
One targeted agent is bevacizumab (a monoclonal antibody developed by Genentech under the trade name Avastin), which inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a natural protein that the tumor uses to grow new blood vessels (angiogenesis). Bevacizumab was the first angiogenesis inhibitor available in the US, and has become established as a standard component of first-line chemotherapy.
To date, no researchers have identified a predictive marker for bevacizumab's activity in metastatic CRC. According to Grothey, key questions surrounding bevacizumab's use in the palliative setting are whether it provides clinical benefit beyond the stage of tumor progression, and which patient group is at higher risk for bevacizumab-related toxicities. Data from a large observational, non-randomized cohort study by Grothey and colleagues in 2008 suggests that patients may benefit from continued use of bevacizumab beyond tumor progression. Randomized phase III clinical trials are currently underway in Europe and the US to determine whether this should become standard practice.
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Clinical decisions regarding whether the goal is to rapidly shrink a tumor, whether to attempt curative surgery or to rapidly boost short-term quality of life or survival, or instead aiming for a longer-term quality of life with minimum side effects will determine the physician's choice of approach.
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Targeted agents have become an integral part of medical therapy for advanced CRC. The next challenge for oncologists is to develop a rationale and biomarker-based treatment algorithm to use all potentially active agents as individualized therapy.
Source-Eurekalert
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