Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2792577 Cell Metabolism 2016 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•High circulating leptin and high BMI correlate with VEGFRi benefit in mCRC•Tumors with greater response have a glycolytic/hypoxic/angiogenic phenotype•Glycolytic/hypoxic/angiogenic phenotype influences preclinical VEGFRi sensitivity•Leptin exposure induces a metabolic/angiogenic phenotype in cancer

SummaryVEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) signaling inhibitors are widely used in different cancer types; however, patient selection remains a challenge. Analyses of samples from a phase III clinical trial in metastatic colorectal cancer testing chemotherapy versus chemotherapy with the small molecule VEGF receptors inhibitor cediranib identified circulating leptin levels, BMI, and a tumor metabolic and angiogenic gene expression signature associated with improved clinical outcome in patients treated with cediranib. Patients with a glycolytic and hypoxic/angiogenic profile were associated with increased benefit from cediranib, whereas patients with a high lipogenic, oxidative phosphorylation and serine biosynthesis signature did not gain benefit. These findings translated to pre-clinical tumor xenograft models where the same metabolic gene expression profiles were associated with in vivo sensitivity to cediranib as monotherapy. These findings suggest a link between patient physiology, tumor biology, and response to antiangiogenics, which may guide patient selection for VEGF therapy in the future.

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