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Ovarian cancer recurrence: is the definition of platinum sensitivity modified by PARPi, bevacizumab or other intervening treatments? : a clinical perspective

Peter G. Rose

2022Cancer Drug Resistance20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In view of the high risk of recurrent disease in stage III and IV ovarian cancer following primary first-line chemotherapy, a variety of maintenance and consolidation treatment strategies have been developed. These have included: radiation, intravenous or intraperitoneal chemotherapy, targeted therapies, and immunotherapy. Popular at this time is the use of Poly-adenosine ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors and bevacizumab as maintenance therapy. What effect these maintenance or consolidation therapies have on subsequent response to therapy, specifically platinum-based chemotherapy, is only beginning to be studied. In this manuscript, we review the impact of PARP inhibitors and bevacizumab as well as radiation and maintenance chemotherapy on subsequent response to treatment. Prior use of bevacizumab does not appear to adversely affect subsequent response to platinum-based chemotherapy or platinum-based chemotherapy with bevacizumab. Prior therapy with PARP inhibitors induces platinum resistance to subsequent platinum-based therapy and negates classic predictors of response such as platinum-free interval and breast cancer susceptibility gene (BRCA) mutational status.

Topics & Concepts

BevacizumabMedicineOncologyChemotherapyOvarian cancerInternal medicineMaintenance therapyRadiation therapyImmunotherapyCancerOvarian cancer diagnosis and treatmentPARP inhibition in cancer therapyViral-associated cancers and disorders
Ovarian cancer recurrence: is the definition of platinum sensitivity modified by PARPi, bevacizumab or other intervening treatments? : a clinical perspective | Litcius