Analysis of electronic health records supports trial data indicating that patients with high-risk prognostic factors are most likely to benefit from this medication.
A real-world study based on information from an electronic health records-derived database reveals limited benefits of adding bevacizumab to first-line chemotherapy for patients with ovarian cancer, consistent with previous clinical trials. The findings are published by Wiley online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society.
Bevacizumab is a monoclonal antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor A that acts to inhibit malignant cell growth and blood vessel formation. It's approved as a treatment for various types of cancer. In clinical trials of patients with ovarian cancer, adding bevacizumab to first-line chemotherapy did not prolong overall survival compared with chemotherapy alone, but this treatment strategy did improve overall survival in analyses limited to patients with high-risk prognostic factors-such as those with advanced disease and those who had residual cancer present after surgery. A final long-term analysis did not find an overall survival benefit associated with bevacizumab in the full patient cohort.
To investigate whether these findings also hold true in real-world clinical practice, researchers examined the electronic health records of 1,752 patients with stage III or IV ovarian cancer who initiated chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab in 2017-2023 and were followed for a median time of 1.5 years.
Among patients with high-risk prognostic factors, the median time to next treatment was significantly longer for those receiving chemotherapy plus bevacizumab compared with those receiving chemotherapy alone: 13.6 versus 11.7 months. (Time to next treatment is used to assess the duration of clinical benefit by measuring the time between initiating a treatment and starting the next line of therapy). In these patients, there was also a trend towards longer median overall survival for the combination therapy: 31.1 versus 27.4 months. Among patients without high-risk prognostic factors, outcomes did not differ with the addition of bevacizumab. Benefits therefore seemed limited to special subpopulations, mirroring the findings from clinical trials.
"Our results were similar to results from clinical trials," said lead author Linda R. Duska, MD, MPH, of the University of Virginia School of Medicine. "Our findings suggest that clinicians should consider a patient's risk factors before using bevacizumab with first-line chemotherapy in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer."
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