PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

VEGF-C serum level is associated with response to bevacizumab maintenance therapy in primary ovarian cancer patients.

  • Yi Ding,
  • Leticia Oliveira-Ferrer,
  • Eike Vettorazzi,
  • Karen Legler,
  • Karin Milde-Langosch,
  • Linn Woelber,
  • Anna Jaeger,
  • Katharina Prieske,
  • Volkmar Mueller,
  • Barbara Schmalfeldt,
  • Sascha Kuerti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269680
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 6
p. e0269680

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveAt present, maintenance therapy with the antiangiogenic agent bevacizumab or with PARP-inhibitors represent two options for BRCA-wildtype ovarian cancer patients, after platinum-based first line chemotherapy. The identification of molecular markers to predict patient response to different maintenance therapies remains a major challenge. In the present study we analyzed the predictive potential of vascular endothelial growth factor C (VEGF-C) to identify ovarian cancer patients that might benefit from an antiangiogenic therapy.Methods101 patients with primary epithelial ovarian cancer were analyzed for serum levels of VEGF-A,-C and CA-125 by ELISA. Serum levels were compared between patients with low pT-stage (pT1a-pT2c n = 11), healthy individuals (n = 27) and patients with higher pT-stage (> = pT3 n = 90). Adjusted ROC curves and an adjusted logistic regression model were carried out to evaluate the potential impact of VEGF-A and -C, as well as CA-125 serum level concentration on bevacizumab-therapy response, under consideration of covariates such as FIGO, pM, pN and residual tumor after surgery.ResultsA patient which has in comparison twice the VEGF-C concentration in serum, has a significant increased chance of response to bevacizumab by a factor of 2.79. Further, only VEGF-C serum levels were significantly higher in the group of patients with lower pT-stage compared to healthy individuals, whereas VEGF-A or CA-125 serum levels could not discriminate between healthy individuals and patients with ovarian cancer at low pT-stages.ConclusionVEGF-C serum level might serve as as a biomarker to evaluate treatment response under bevacizumab.