4.6 Article

Combination therapy with bevacizumab and a CCR2 inhibitor for human ovarian cancer: An in vivo validation study

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.5674

Keywords

angiogenesis; antiangiogenic drug; bevacizumab; CCR2 inhibitor; preclinical drug evaluation

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In this study, combination therapy with BEV and CCR2 inhibitor BMS CCR2 22 was validated to overcome resistance to BEV in ovarian cancer patients. The results showed significant growth suppression in both BEV-sensitive and BEV-resistant patients, and the effect was sustained even after treatment cessation.
BackgroundAnti-angiogenic therapy with bevacizumab (BEV), an anti-VEGF antibody, plays a critical role in the treatment of ovarian cancer. However, despite an encouraging initial response, most tumors become resistant to BEV over time, and a new strategy that enables sustainable treatment using BEV is therefore needed. MethodsTo overcome the resistance to BEV in patients with ovarian cancer, we performed a validation study of combination therapy with BEV (10 mg/kg) and the CCR2 inhibitor BMS CCR2 22 (20 mg/kg) (BEV/CCR2i) using 3 consecutive patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) of immunodeficient mice. ResultsBEV/CCR2i demonstrated a significant effect of growth suppression in the BEV-resistant serous PDX and BEV-sensitive serous PDX compared with BEV (30.4% after the second cycle and 15.5% after the first cycle, respectively), and treatment cessation did not attenuate this effect. Tissue clearing and immunohistochemistry with an anti-alpha-SMA antibody suggested that BEV/CCR2i suppressed angiogenesis from the host mice more than BEV. In addition, human CD31 immunohistochemistry revealed that BEV/CCR2i decreased microvessels originating from the patients to a significantly greater degree than BEV. Regarding the BEV-resistant clear cell PDX, the effect of BEV/CCR2i was unclear during the first five cycles, but the following two cycles of increased-dose BEV/CCR2i (CCR2i 40 mg/kg) significantly suppressed tumor growth compared with BEV (28.3%) by inhibiting the CCR2B-MAPK pathway. ConclusionsBEV/CCR2i showed a sustained anticancer immunity-independent effect in human ovarian cancer that was more significant in serous carcinoma than in clear cell carcinoma.

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