Angiogenesis linked to poor survival in patients with sex cord-stromal ovarian tumors
Researchers from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center have found that increased angiogenesis and vascular endothelial
growth factor expression are associated with poor survival in women with sex cord-stromal
ovarian tumors. This data was presented at the Society of Gynecologic Oncologists'
40th Annual Meeting on Women's Cancer.
Sex cord-stromal ovarian tumors are rare, accounting
for five to seven percent of all ovarian cancer diagnosed, and there is little
data available on how they advance, or metastasize, in patients. These findings
provide doctors greater understanding into how they may be able to successfully
treat patients with this type of tumor by inhibiting angiogenesis according to
the study's authors.
"These tumors tend to metastasize very differently
from other, more common types of ovarian tumors," said Jubilee Brown, M.D.,
assistant professor in the Department of Gynecologic Oncology and lead author
on the study. "For instance, sex cord-stromal tumor cells rarely break away
and invade the lymph nodes, but we still see evidence of their spread to distant
locations in the body such as the abdomen and liver. This unusual progression
hinted that a different pattern of metastasis in which tumor cells break off and
invade the blood system, may be at play."
Researchers looked at 54 sex cord-stromal ovarian tumor
samples, 28 from women with primary occurrences and 26 from women with recurrences.
The samples were evaluated for two common indicators of angiogenesis: expression
of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) protein and high microvessel
density (MVD). Of those tumors studied, VEGF overexpression was noted in 52 percent
and a high MVD was present in 32 percent. Both high MVD and VEGF were linked to
significantly poorer survival (130 months versus 415 months in those with high
MVD and 154 months versus 394 months in those with VEGF overexpression). Researchers
noted that high MVD was also associated with recurrence and metastasis to other
locations such as the abdomen, liver, lung and bone.
"Unlike most ovarian tumors which metastasize to
nearby tissues or invade the lymphatic system, we suspect that the biological
qualities of sex cord-stromal tumors, especially their ability to spread to and
survive in distant sites of the body, explain why this type of ovarian cancer
behaves so differently in patients," said Anil Sood, M.D., professor in the
Departments of Gynecologic Oncology and Cancer Biology at M. D. Anderson and senior
author on the study. "By honing in on how sex cord-stromal tumors utilize
the blood vessels to become deadly, we can begin to test targeted anti-angiogenic
therapies as possible means to control their growth."
Anti-angiogenic agents have been used in other cancers
including colorectal, breast, lung and kidney cancers to slow tumor growth. Brown
is currently the principal investigator on a Gynecologic Oncology Group Phase
II clinical trial at M. D. Anderson to test the efficacy of bevacizumab, a drug
that blocks angiogenesis through antibodies against VEGF, in patients with sex
cord-stromal tumors.
In addition to Brown and Sood, M. D. Anderson researchers
contributing to this study include Alpa Nick, M.D., Ljiljana Milojevic, D.D.S.
and David M. Gershenson, M.D, all from the Department of Gynecologic Oncology,
and Michael Deavers, M.D., from the Department of Pathology.
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