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Correlation Between Bevacizumab Exposure and Survival in Patients with Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Apostolos Papachristos, Polychronis Kemos, Haralabos P. Kalofonos, Gregory Sivolapenko

2020The Oncologist34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bevacizumab treatment is subject to large interpatient variability in efficacy, which may partly be explained by differences in complex bevacizumab pharmacokinetic characteristics that influence bevacizumab exposure. Exposure-response relationships have been identified for other monoclonal antibodies. We aimed to identify possible exposure-survival relationships in bevacizumab-treated patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with mCRC who started first-line bevacizumab-based chemotherapy between July 2012 and July 2014, and from whom serial blood samples and survival were prospectively collected, were included. Follow-up was carried out until July 2018. Total bevacizumab trough concentrations were measured from cycle 2 to cycle 30 of treatment. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis and Cox analysis were used to identify the relationship between concentrations and overall survival (OS). In addition, OS was compared between different trough concentration groups. RESULTS: ≥7.9 mg/L), where the majority of patients were still alive 60 months after the initiation of treatment. CONCLUSION: This study shows that survival was proportional to the magnitude of exposure in patients with mCRC. Further clinical research should focus on clarifying these exposure-outcome relationships in order to optimize dosing. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Bevacizumab-based chemotherapy is standard first-line treatment in metastatic colorectal cancer. Moreover, bevacizumab presents complicated pharmacokinetics, and in many cases, clinical outcomes can be highly variable, with some patients responding remarkably well and others not. This study's results show that patients who experienced longer overall survival also had significantly higher exposure to bevacizumab. Therefore, bevacizumab trough concentrations could be used both as a predictive biomarker and as a tool for treatment monitoring and optimization. Finally, the development of validated, rapid, and sensitive assays for bevacizumab concentration measurements in combination with these results may lead to a therapeutic drug monitoring-guided approach in bevacizumab treatment with better clinical outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

BevacizumabMedicineColorectal cancerProportional hazards modelInternal medicineOncologyGastroenterologyChemotherapySurvival analysisTrough ConcentrationArea under the curvePharmacokineticsCancerColorectal Cancer Treatments and StudiesCancer Treatment and PharmacologyHER2/EGFR in Cancer Research