Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2792577 | Cell Metabolism | 2016 | 17 Pages |
•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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