4.6 Article

Predicting response to the anti-estrogen fulvestrant in recurrent ovarian cancer

Journal

GYNECOLOGIC ONCOLOGY
Volume 131, Issue 2, Pages 368-373

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2013.07.099

Keywords

Ovarian cancer; Fulvestrant; Endocrine therapy; Biological therapy; Estrogen receptor; Vimentin

Funding

  1. Scottish Funding Council
  2. Charon fund

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Background. Anti-estrogen therapy appears to have efficacy in a subset of ovarian cancers, as demonstrated in multiple phase II studies. Identifying sensitive patients early in treatment may allow for targeted, low-toxicity primary therapy or prevention of recurrence. We have previously demonstrated that the likelihood of response to letrozole could be improved by patient selection based on estrogen-pathway marker expression. We sought to identify ovarian cancer biomarkers that might indicate sensitivity to fulvestrant, an estrogen receptor antagonist. Methods. Tissue samples from the primary tumors of patients enrolled in a phase II study of fulvestrant for the treatment of multiply-recurrent ovarian cancer were embedded randomly in a tissue microarray (TMA). Estrogen receptor alpha (ER alpha) expression was assessed by both conventional immunohistochemistry (IHC) and quantitative immunofluorescence (IF) (AQUA) while expression of 14 other estrogen-regulated markers was assessed by quantitative IF and correlated with clinical outcomes. Results. Almost half of patients experienced clinical benefit (CR + PR + SD) at 90 days despite a median of 5 previous treatment regimens. 24 of 26 patient samples were available and included in the TMA. ER alpha expression, measured either by conventional IHC or by AQUA analysis, was associated with clinical benefit, while TFF1 and vimentin expression (measured by IF AQUA score) was predictive of progression-free survival. Conclusions. These results confirm our previous observation that clinical ovarian cancer includes a subset of tumors with sensitivity to estrogen pathway blockade. Expression profile of sensitive tumors appears to be detectably different from insensitive tumors, suggesting that further improvements in treatment efficacy can be obtained through appropriate patient selection. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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