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New angiogenesis inhibitor
has promise for treating aggressive brain tumor
Preliminary results show tumor shrinkage, reduction in edema,
normalization of blood vessels
Researchers from the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Cancer Center have
found that AZD2171, a new angiogenesis inhibitor, can reduce
the size of brain tumors called glioblastomas and has the potential
of improving the effectiveness of other therapeutic techniques. The
Phase 2 clinical trial also finds that AZD2171 treatment can alleviate brain
swelling (edema), a debilitating symptom in many brain cancer patients that
currently can be treated only with steroid drugs. Appeared in the
January 2007 issue of Cancer
Cell, the study is too preliminary
to determine whether this new drug may have an impact on overall patient
survival.
“Patients
with recurrent glioblastomas desperately need new, effective treatment alternatives,” says Tracy
Batchelor, MD, MPH, executive director of Stephen
E. and Catherine Pappas Center for Neuro-Oncology, the study’s lead author. “While
these are preliminary results of an initial trial, it’s looking like
these agents may play an increasingly important role in the treatment of
patients whose tumors have recurred and perhaps in newly diagnosed patients
as well.”
Glioblastoma is the most malignant form of brain tumor and has a very poor
prognosis. Standard treatments – including surgery, chemotherapy
and radiation therapy – may delay tumor growth, but patients usually
survive for little more than a year. There are currently no effective
options for patients whose tumors recur, the vast majority of whom die within
6 months.
Angiogenesis inhibitors suppress the growth of blood vessels supplying a tumor
and have received a lot of attention as potential cancer-fighting agents. While
the earliest clinical trials did not meet expectations that these drugs would ‘starve’ tumors,
the agents did improve patient survival when combined with traditional anticancer
therapies. Three anti-angiogenic drugs have received FDA approval
for the treatment of certain tumors, and several others are under investigation. An
oral medication, AZD2171 is a potent inhibitor of the three primary receptors
for the powerful angiogenesis factor VEGF, known be present on glioblastoma
blood vessels. Manufactured by AstraZeneca, AZD2171 is currently available
only to participants in clinical trials.
The
Cancer Center trial, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute,
was designed to assess whether AZD2171 could benefit patients
with recurrent glioblastomas and also if the drug might normalize
tumor vasculature. Blood vessels that develop around
and within tumors are leaky and disorganized, potentially blocking
the delivery of chemotherapy drugs or the effectiveness of
radiation therapy, which requires an adequate supply of oxygen
to the tumor.
The
fact that combining angiogenesis inhibitors with other therapies improved
survival for some patients supports a theory developed by Rakesh
Jain, PhD, director of the Steele
Laboratory in the Department of Radiation
Oncology and senior author of the Cancer
Cell article, that the
agents temporarily ‘normalize’ blood vessels, creating a period
during which chemotherapy and radiation treatment can be more effective.
The paper reports on the first 16 patients to enter the clinical trial, which
began in January 2006. All had glioblastomas that had resumed growing
despite prior radiation or chemotherapy. Participants took a daily
oral dose of AZD2171, which started at 45 mg and could be reduced in those
experiencing negative side effects, including fatigue, diarrhea and hypertension. Participants
were followed with regular physical, neurological, and MR imaging exams during
the 6-month study period.
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Imaging studies showed that tumors
began to shrink in most participants within 28 days of the initial
AZD2171 dose. |
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Overall, the tumors shrank by at least 25 percent in three-quarters of the
study participants and by 50 percent or more in half of the patients. Factors
indicating a normalization of the tumors’ blood vessels – including
reduction in size and a decrease in permeability or ‘leakiness’ – were
seen almost immediately in most participants and continued for at least 28
days, with some features persisting up to four months. These results
are the first to define how long the period of vascular normalization might
last, which may establish a window of time during which applying additional
therapies would be most effective.
The highly advanced MR imaging techniques used in this report,
developed at Massachusetts General Hospital, showed the vascular
normalization to be very rapid, beginning after the first dose
in some patients. Other MGH-pioneered MRI techniques showed
that AZD2171 treatment led to a rapid decrease in brain edema,
an effect that continued as long as the medication was taken. Edema
produces many of the symptoms experienced by brain tumor patients and can
only be treated with steroids, which have negative side effects of their
own. The alleviation of edema allowed several study participants to
reduce or even discontinue steroid treatment.
Analysis of potential biomarkers – molecular and cellular factors that
can be measured in the blood – identified several that may indicate
when the period of vascular normalization is ending or which patients’ tumors
are most likely to become resistant to AZD2171 treatment. These findings
suggest that the imaging and biomarker studies will be important scientific
tools for future assessment of therapy with AZD2171 and other drugs.
“This small group of patients needs to be followed for a longer period
of time, but we are cautiously optimistic that this trial and future studies
will lead to positive long-term outcomes for some patients,” says
Jain. He is the Cook Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical
School, where Batchelor is an associate professor of Neurology. The
researchers expect that the complete results of this trial, which enrolled
a total of 31 patients, will be available later this year. They also
are exploring additional trials to further define the role of AZD2171 in
glioblastoma treatment and hope to study the drug in combination with traditional
therapies and in newly diagnosed patients.
Contact Information
For Patient Inquiries
The clinical trial reported in the news media for the drug Recentim is currently
closed. If you live outside of the Boston area and are seeking treatment
for glioblastoma through clinical trials, please contact your physician
for more information.
However, for patients with glioblastoma who live within New England, clinical
trials for this disease are available the Massachusetts General Hospital
Cancer Center through the Stephen E. and Catherine Pappas Center for Neuro-Oncology.
To schedule a consult at the Cancer Center, please contact the Cancer Center
at 877-726-5130.
For Research Professionals
For information on the Edwin
L. Steele Laboratory
For Information on Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging: www.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu or
www.martinos.org
Additional News Sources
National Cancer Institute Bulletin
Bloomberg
News
BBC News
Washington Post
Newsday
Health
News - Indianapolis Star
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