1. Effect of antiangiogenic-based treatment and systemic inflammatory factors on outcomes in patients with BRAF v600-mutated metastatic colorectal cancer: a real-world study in Spain.
- Author
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Martínez-Lago, Nieves, Fernández-Montes, Ana, Covela, Marta, Brozos, Elena M., De la Cámara, Juan, Méndez Méndez, José C., Jorge-Fernández, Mónica, Cousillas Castiñeiras, Antía, Reboredo, Cristina, Arias Ron, David, Pellón Augusto, María L., González Villarroel, Paula, Graña, Begoña, Salgado Fernández, Mercedes, Carral Maseda, Alberto, Vázquez Rivera, Francisca, Candamio Folgar, Sonia, Reboredo López, Margarita, and Galician Research Group on Digestive Tumors (GITuD)
- Subjects
COLORECTAL cancer ,METASTASIS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,LYMPHOCYTES ,SERUM albumin ,SURVIVAL ,RESEARCH ,NEOVASCULARIZATION inhibitors ,GENETIC mutation ,INFLAMMATION ,BLOOD platelets ,RESEARCH methodology ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,PROGNOSIS ,EVALUATION research ,NEUTROPHILS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,TRANSFERASES ,RESEARCH funding ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Outcomes are poorer in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients with BRAF V600E mutations than those without it, but the effect of these mutations on treatment response is unclear. This real-world study assessed the effects of antiangiogenic-based treatment and systemic inflammatory factors on outcomes in patients with BRAF V600-mutated mCRC.Methods: This real-world, multicenter, retrospective, observational study included patients with BRAF V600-mutated mCRC treated in eight hospitals in Spain. The primary endpoints were overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS); overall response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) were also assessed. The effect of first- and second-line treatment type on OS, PFS, ORR, and DCR were evaluated, plus the impact of systemic inflammatory markers on these outcomes. A systemic inflammation score (SIS) of 1-3 was assigned based on one point each for platelet-lymphocyte ratio (PLR) ≥200, neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) ≥3, and serum albumin < 3.6 g/dL.Results: Of 72 patients, data from 64 were analyzed. After a median of 69.1 months, median OS was 11.9 months and median first-line PFS was 4.4 months. First-line treatment was triplet chemotherapy-antiangiogenic (12.5%), doublet chemotherapy-antiangiogenic (47.2%), doublet chemotherapy-anti-EGFR (11.1%), or doublet chemotherapy (18.1%). Although first-line treatment showed no significant effect on OS, antiangiogenic-based regimens were associated with prolonged median PFS versus non-antiangiogenic regimens. Negative predictors of survival with antiangiogenic-based treatment were NLR, serum albumin, and SIS 1-3, but not PLR. Patients with SIS 1-3 showed significantly prolonged PFS with antiangiogenic-based treatment versus non-antiangiogenic-based treatment, while those with SIS=0 showed no PFS benefit.Conclusions: Antiangiogenic-based regimens, SIS, NLR, and albumin were predictors of survival in patients with mCRC, while SIS, NLR and serum albumin may predict response to antiangiogenic-based chemotherapy.Trial Registration: GIT-BRAF-2017-01. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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