4.3 Article

Clinical development and evaluation of a VEGF-D assay in plasma from patients with metastatic colorectal cancer in the RAISE study

Journal

CURRENT MEDICAL RESEARCH AND OPINION
Volume 37, Issue 10, Pages 1769-1778

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03007995.2021.1940908

Keywords

Vascular endothelial growth factor-D; RAISE; ramucirumab; biomarker; metastatic colorectal cancer; FOLFIRI

Funding

  1. Eli Lilly and Company

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A new plasma detection method was used to investigate the relationship between Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-D levels and the efficacy of ramucirumab in treating metastatic colorectal cancer. The study found that patients with high VEGF-D levels had better overall survival and progression-free survival when treated with ramucirumab compared to placebo, but baseline VEGF-D levels were not predictive of the benefit of ramucirumab in terms of overall survival.
Background Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-D was identified as a potential predictive biomarker for ramucirumab efficacy in second-line metastatic colorectal cancer using a research use only (RUO) assay. We describe results with a new assay for detecting VEGF-D in human plasma. Methods In RAISE (Clinical Trial Registration: NCT01183780), 1072 patients were randomized 1:1 to ramucirumab or placebo plus FOLFIRI. All patients were then randomized 1:2 to marker exploratory (ME) and marker confirmatory (MC) groups, and those with plasma samples were analyzed accordingly. A new assay validated for investigational use only (IUO) was used to measure VEGF-D levels in plasma, which were analyzed for correlation with overall and progression-free survival (OS/PFS). IUO assay data were compared with historical RUO assay data. Results ME subset analyses determined the optimal cutpoint of 5.4 ng/mL for defining high/low VEGF-D subgroups. In the combined ME/MC placebo arms, OS/PFS were numerically greater for patients with low vs high VEGF-D (OS: 12.8 vs 11.1 months; PFS: 5.6 vs 4.2 months). In patients with high VEGF-D, ramucirumab vs placebo demonstrated a numerically greater improvement in OS and PFS. Differential efficacy by VEGF-D level was statistically significant for PFS, but not OS. Conclusion In patients with high VEGF-D, ramucirumab demonstrated a greater improvement in OS and PFS vs placebo; however, baseline VEGF-D level was not predictive of ramucirumab OS benefit using VEGF-D assay for IUO. The RAISE intent-to-treat results remain valid.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available