Biomedicines (Oct 2023)

VEGFA Status as a Predictive Marker of Therapy Outcome in Metastatic Gastric Cancer Patients Following Ramucirumab-Based Treatment

  • Annalisa Schirizzi,
  • Aram Arshadi,
  • Doron Tolomeo,
  • Laura Schirosi,
  • Anna Maria Valentini,
  • Giampiero De Leonardis,
  • Maria Grazia Refolo,
  • Rossella Donghia,
  • Clelia Tiziana Storlazzi,
  • Alfredo Zito,
  • Angela Dalia Ricci,
  • Simona Vallarelli,
  • Carmela Ostuni,
  • Maria Bencivenga,
  • Giovanni De Manzoni,
  • Caterina Messa,
  • Raffaele Armentano,
  • Gianluigi Giannelli,
  • Claudio Lotesoriere,
  • Rosalba D’Alessandro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11102721
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 2721

Abstract

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Metastatic gastric cancer (mGC) often has a poor prognosis and may benefit from a few targeted therapies. Ramucirumab-based anti-angiogenic therapy targeting the VEGFR2 represents a milestone in the second-line treatment of mGC. Several studies on different cancers are focusing on the major VEGFR2 ligand status, meaning VEGFA gene copy number and protein overexpression, as a prognostic marker and predictor of response to anti-angiogenic therapy. Following this insight, our study aims to examine the role of VEGFA status as a predictive biomarker for the outcome of second-line therapy with Ramucirumab and paclitaxel in mGC patients. To this purpose, the copy number of the VEGFA gene, by fluorescence in situ hybridization experiments, and its expression in tumor tissue as well as the density of micro-vessels, by immunohistochemistry experiments, were assessed in samples derived from mGC patients. This analysis found that amplification of VEGFA concomitantly with VEGFA overexpression and overexpression of VEGFA with micro-vessels density are more represented in patients showing disease control during treatment with Ramucirumab. In addition, in the analyzed series, it was found that amplification was not always associated with overexpression of VEGFA, but overexpression of VEGFA correlates with high micro-vessel density. In conclusion, overexpression of VEGFA could emerge as a potential biomarker to predict the response to anti-angiogenic therapy.

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