871 resultados para TARGETED THERAPIES


Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The cobas® (Roche) portfolio of companion diagnostics in oncology currently has three assays CE-marked for in vitro diagnostics. Two of these (EGFR and BRAF) are also US FDA-approved. These assays detect clinically relevant mutations that are correlated with response (BRAF, EGFR) or lack of response (KRAS) to targeted therapies such as selective mutant BRAF inhibitors in malignant melanoma, tyrosine kinases inhibitor in non-small cell lung cancer and anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies in colorectal cancer, respectively. All these assays are run on a single platform using DNA extracted from a single 5 µm section of a formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue block. The assays provide an ‘end-to-end’ solution from extraction of DNA to automated analysis and report on the cobas z 480. The cobas tests have shown robust and reproducible performance, with high sensitivity and specificity and low limit of detection, making them suitable as companion diagnostics for clinical use.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

INTRODUCTION: The presence of ROS proto-oncogene 1, receptor tyrosine kinase gene (ROS1) rearrangements in lung cancers confers sensitivity to ROS kinase inhibitors, including crizotinib. However, they are rare abnormalities (in ∼1% of non-small cell lung carcinomas) that are typically identified by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and so screening using immunohistochemical (IHC) staining would be both cost- and time-efficient.

METHODS: A cohort of lung tumors negative for other common mutations related to targeted therapies were screened to assess the sensitivity and specificity of IHC staining in detecting ROS1 gene rearrangements, enriched by four other cases first identified by FISH. A review of published data was also undertaken.

RESULTS: IHC staining was 100% sensitive (95% confidence interval: 48-100) and 83% specific (95% confidence interval: 86-100) overall when an h-score higher than 100 was used. Patients with ROS1 gene rearrangements were younger and typically never-smokers, with the tumors all being adenocarcinomas with higher-grade architectural features and focal signet ring morphologic features (two of five). Four patients treated with crizotinib showed a partial response, with three also showing a partial response to pemetrexed. Three of four patients remain alive at 13, 27, and 31 months, respectively.

CONCLUSION: IHC staining can be used to screen for ROS1 gene rearrangements, with patients herein showing a response to crizotinib. Patients with tumors that test positive according to IHC staining but negative according to FISH were also identified, which may have implications for treatment selection.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The innate immune system recognizes microbial features leading to the activation of the adaptive immune system. The role of Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) is to recognize microbial DNA. In addition to immune cells, TLR9 is widely expressed in breast cancer in addition to other cancers. Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, affecting approximately one in eight in industrialized countries. In the clinical setting, breast cancer is divided into three clinical subtypes with type-specific treatments. These subtypes are estrogen receptor (ER)-positive, HER2-positive and triple-negative (TNBC) breast cancer. TNBC is the most aggressive subtype that can be further divided into several subtypes. TNBC tumors lack ER, progesterone receptor and HER2 receptor. Therefore, the current clinically used targeted therapies are not suitable for TNBC treatment as TNBC is a collection of diseases rather than one entity. Some TNBC patients are cured with standard chemotherapy, while others rapidly die due to the disease. There are no clinically used iomarkers which would help in predicting which patients respond to chemotherapy. During this thesis project, we discovered a novel good-prognosis TNBC subtype. These tumors have high TLR9 expression levels. Our findings suggest that TLR9 screening in TNBC patient populations might help to identify the patients that are at the highest risk regarding a relapse. To gain better understanding on the role of TLR9 in TNBC, we developed an animal model which mimicks this disease. We discovered that suppression of TLR9 expression in TNBC cells increases their invasive properties in hypoxia. In line with the clinical findings, TNBC cells with low TLR9 expression also formed more aggressive tumors in vivo. TLR9 expression did not, however, affect TNBC tumor responses to doxorubicin. Our results suggest that tumor TLR9 expression may affect chemotherapyrelated immune responses, however, this requires further investigation. Our other findings revealed that DNA released by chemotherapy-killed cells induces TLR9-mediated invasion in living cancer cells. Normally, extracellular self-DNA is degraded by enzymes, but during massive cell death, for example during chemotherapy, the degradation machinery may be exhausted and self-DNA is taken up into living cells activating TLR9. We also discovered that the malaria drug chloroquine, an inhibitor of autophagy and TLR9 signalling does not inhibit TNBC growth in vivo, independently of the TLR9 status. Finally, we found that ERα as well as the sex hormones estrogen and testosterone regulate TLR9 expression and activity in breast cancer cells in vitro. As a conclusion, we suggest that TLR9 is a potential biomarker in TNBC. ------- Sisäsyntyisen immuniteetin tehtävä on tunnistaa mikrobien molekyylirakenteita, mikä saa aikaan adaptiivisen immuunijärjestelmän aktivoitumisen. Tollin kaltainen reseptori 9 (TLR9) on dna:ta tunnistava sisäsyntyisen immuniteetin reseptori, jota ilmennetään myös useissa syövissä, kuten rintasyövässä. Rintasyöpä on naisten yleisin syöpä, johon joka kahdeksas nainen sairastuu elämänsä aikana. Kliinisesti rintasyöpä jaotellaan kolmeen alatyyppiin, joista kolmoisnegatiivinen rintasyöpä on aggressiivisin. Tämän tyypin syövät eivät ilmennä hormonireseptoreja (estrogeeni- ja progesteronireseptori) tai HER2-reseptoria. Tästä johtuen kolmoisnegatiivisten potilaiden hoitoon ei voida käyttää rintasyövän nykyisten hoitosuositusten mukaisia täsmähoitoja. Kolmoisnegatiivinen rintasyöpä ei kuitenkaan ole yksi sairaus, koska molekyylitasolla sen on osoitettu koostuvan lukuisista, biologialtaan erilaisista syöpämuodoista. Tällä hetkellä kliinisessä käytössä ei ole biomarkkeria, jonka avulla kolmoisnegatiivisen rintasyövän alatyypit voisi erottaa toisistaan. Löysimme uuden kolmoisnegatiivisen syövän alatyypin, joka ilmentää vain vähän TLR9-proteiinia. Tällä alatyypillä on erittäin huono ennuste ja tulostemme perusteella TRL9-tason selvittäminen voisi seuloa huonoennusteiset syövät kolmoisnegatiivisten syöpien joukosta. Kehitimme eläinmallin, jolla voidaan tutkia matalan ja korkean TLR9-tason vaikutuksia kolmoisnegatiivisten kasvainten hoitovasteeseen. Toinen löytömme oli, että kemoterapialla tapettujen syöpäsolujen dna saa aikaan elävien syöpäsolujen TLR9-välitteistä invaasiota. Normaalisti entsyymit hajoittavat yksilön oman solunulkoisen dna:n. Erikoistilanteissa, kuten syöpähoitojen yhteydessä, jolloin solukuolema on massiivista, elimistön oma koneisto ei ehdi tuhoamaan solunulkoista dna:ta ja sitä voi kertyä eläviin soluihin, joissa se aktivoi TLR9:n. Kolmanneksi havaitsimme, että malarialääke klorokiini, joka estää TLR9:n toimintaa ja jolla on syövänvastaisia vaikutuksia soluviljelyolosuhteissa, ei estänyt TLR9-positiivisten tai TLR9-negatiivisten kasvainten kasvua käyttämässämme eläinmallissa. Neljänneksi soluviljelykokeittemme tulokset osoittivat, että sukupuolihormonit estrogeeni ja testosteroni sekä estrogeenireseptori osallistuvat TLR9:n ilmentymisen ja aktiivisuuden säätelyyn. Tuloksemme osoittavat, että TLR9 potentiaalinen biomarkkeri kolmoisnegatiivisessa rintasyövässä.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Triple negative breast cancers (TNBC) are often described as biologically aggressive tumors, with poorer survival compared to other breast cancer subtypes. The fact that TNBC lacks an obvious target like estrogen receptor and HER2 represents a major challenge in the management of these patients. Genomic analyses have revealed that TNBC comprises a diverse group of cancers, which have distinct molecular profiles and different prognosis. These studies also highlighted molecular aberrations that could serve as potential treatment targets. On the other hand, a high percentage of TNBCs express some important surface receptors that have been already exploited in the development of promising targeted therapies, which are currently tested in clinical trials. In this review, we will provide an overview on the molecular diversity of TNBC with special emphasis on the evolving role of some potential biomarkers that may be utilized in the near future.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a rare but serious condition that causes progressive right ventricular (RV) failure and death. PH may be idiopathic, associated with underlying connective-tissue disease or hypoxic lung disease, and is also increasingly being observed in the setting of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The management of PH has been revolutionised by the recent development of new disease-targeted therapies which are beneficial in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), but can be potentially harmful in PH due to left heart disease, so accurate diagnosis and classification of patients is essential. These PAH therapies improve exercise capacity and pulmonary haemodynamics, but their overall effect on the right ventricle remains unclear. Current practice in the UK is to assess treatment response with 6-minute walk test and NYHA functional class, neither of which truly reflects RV function. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging has been established as the gold standard for the evaluation of right ventricular structure and function, but it also allows a non-invasive and accurate study of the left heart. The aims of this thesis were to investigate the use of CMR in the diagnosis of PH, in the assessment of treatment response, and in predicting survival in idiopathic and connective-tissue disease associated PAH. In Chapter 3, a left atrial volume (LAV) threshold of 43 ml/m2 measured with CMR was able to distinguish idiopathic PAH from PH due to HFpEF (sensitivity 97%, specificity 100%). In Chapter 4, disease-targeted PAH therapy resulted in significant improvements in RV and left ventricular ejection fraction (p<0.001 and p=0.0007, respectively), RV stroke volume index (p<0.0001), and left ventricular end-diastolic volume index (p=0.0015). These corresponded to observed improvements in functional class and exercise capacity, although correlation coefficients between Δ 6MWD and Δ RVEF or Δ LVEDV were low. Finally, in Chapter 5, one-year and three-year survival was worse in CTD-PAH (75% and 53%) than in IPAH (83% and 74%), despite similar baseline clinical characteristics, lung function, pulmonary haemodynamics and treatment. Baseline right ventricular stroke volume index was an independent predictor of survival in both conditions. The presence of LV systolic dysfunction was of prognostic significance in CTD-PAH but not IPAH, and a higher LAV was observed in CTD-PAH suggesting a potential contribution from LV diastolic dysfunction in this group.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

International audience

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Single-cell functional proteomics assays can connect genomic information to biological function through quantitative and multiplex protein measurements. Tools for single-cell proteomics have developed rapidly over the past 5 years and are providing unique opportunities. This thesis describes an emerging microfluidics-based toolkit for single cell functional proteomics, focusing on the development of the single cell barcode chips (SCBCs) with applications in fundamental and translational cancer research.

The microchip designed to simultaneously quantify a panel of secreted, cytoplasmic and membrane proteins from single cells will be discussed at the beginning, which is the prototype for subsequent proteomic microchips with more sophisticated design in preclinical cancer research or clinical applications. The SCBCs are a highly versatile and information rich tool for single-cell functional proteomics. They are based upon isolating individual cells, or defined number of cells, within microchambers, each of which is equipped with a large antibody microarray (the barcode), with between a few hundred to ten thousand microchambers included within a single microchip. Functional proteomics assays at single-cell resolution yield unique pieces of information that significantly shape the way of thinking on cancer research. An in-depth discussion about analysis and interpretation of the unique information such as functional protein fluctuations and protein-protein correlative interactions will follow.

The SCBC is a powerful tool to resolve the functional heterogeneity of cancer cells. It has the capacity to extract a comprehensive picture of the signal transduction network from single tumor cells and thus provides insight into the effect of targeted therapies on protein signaling networks. We will demonstrate this point through applying the SCBCs to investigate three isogenic cell lines of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).

The cancer cell population is highly heterogeneous with high-amplitude fluctuation at the single cell level, which in turn grants the robustness of the entire population. The concept that a stable population existing in the presence of random fluctuations is reminiscent of many physical systems that are successfully understood using statistical physics. Thus, tools derived from that field can probably be applied to using fluctuations to determine the nature of signaling networks. In the second part of the thesis, we will focus on such a case to use thermodynamics-motivated principles to understand cancer cell hypoxia, where single cell proteomics assays coupled with a quantitative version of Le Chatelier's principle derived from statistical mechanics yield detailed and surprising predictions, which were found to be correct in both cell line and primary tumor model.

The third part of the thesis demonstrates the application of this technology in the preclinical cancer research to study the GBM cancer cell resistance to molecular targeted therapy. Physical approaches to anticipate therapy resistance and to identify effective therapy combinations will be discussed in detail. Our approach is based upon elucidating the signaling coordination within the phosphoprotein signaling pathways that are hyperactivated in human GBMs, and interrogating how that coordination responds to the perturbation of targeted inhibitor. Strongly coupled protein-protein interactions constitute most signaling cascades. A physical analogy of such a system is the strongly coupled atom-atom interactions in a crystal lattice. Similar to decomposing the atomic interactions into a series of independent normal vibrational modes, a simplified picture of signaling network coordination can also be achieved by diagonalizing protein-protein correlation or covariance matrices to decompose the pairwise correlative interactions into a set of distinct linear combinations of signaling proteins (i.e. independent signaling modes). By doing so, two independent signaling modes – one associated with mTOR signaling and a second associated with ERK/Src signaling have been resolved, which in turn allow us to anticipate resistance, and to design combination therapies that are effective, as well as identify those therapies and therapy combinations that will be ineffective. We validated our predictions in mouse tumor models and all predictions were borne out.

In the last part, some preliminary results about the clinical translation of single-cell proteomics chips will be presented. The successful demonstration of our work on human-derived xenografts provides the rationale to extend our current work into the clinic. It will enable us to interrogate GBM tumor samples in a way that could potentially yield a straightforward, rapid interpretation so that we can give therapeutic guidance to the attending physicians within a clinical relevant time scale. The technical challenges of the clinical translation will be presented and our solutions to address the challenges will be discussed as well. A clinical case study will then follow, where some preliminary data collected from a pediatric GBM patient bearing an EGFR amplified tumor will be presented to demonstrate the general protocol and the workflow of the proposed clinical studies.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

O cancro oral é uma neoplasia maligna relativamente frequente, sendo por isso responsável por uma taxa de mortalidade elevada. Em particular, o carcinoma espinocelular é o tipo histológico mais frequente das neoplasias malignas da cavidade oral, estando claramente associada a factores de risco como o tabaco, o consumo de álcool e a infecção pelo vírus do papiloma humano (HPV). Actualmente, no mundo ocidental, observa-se um aumento na incidência do cancro da língua que parece estar relacionado com infecções pelos vírus HPV. Tendo em conta os fenómenos associados à cancerização da mucosa oral e a progressão do mesmo, este trabalho tem como função a pesquisa de possíveis alternativas de tratamentos, nomeadamente a imunoterapia, com a utilização de anticorpos monoclonais, terapia de vacinas, terapia de transferência adoptiva de células T, entre outras, uma vez que nem sempre os tratamentos convencionais como a quimioterapia, radioterapia, ou tratamento cirúrgico se revelam completamente eficazes. Contudo, existe uma carência de protocolos definidos, sendo a imunoterapia ainda uma terapêutica a evoluir, por isso esta monografia pretende fazer uma revisão sobre o ‘’estado da arte’’ deste tema tão complexo, com base em literatura de vários autores ao longo desta última década. Este trabalho pretende mencionar novos alvos terapêuticos que permitem desenhar terapêuticas mais dirigidas e, eventualmente, com menos efeitos adversos. A utilização por exemplo do cetuximab (anti-EGFR), que na prática clínica é já uma realidade.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Almost 18-35% of cutaneous melanomas are located in the head and neck region (2-5% of them in the scalp) and according to multiple epidemiological studies they are supposed to have a worse prognosis with respect to those of other body areas. The aim of this phD project is to perform a global evaluation of head/neck region cutaneous melanomas with a distinct analysis of histological, dermoscopic and molecular features of the selected cases. The diffuse distribution of folliculotropism (≥3 HF/specimen), the presence of atypical melanocytes into the isthmus, and the perifollicular involvement were associated with melanoma recurrence. The dermoscopic parameter grey circles in lentigo maligna was correlated to the depth of folliculotropism, with a higher probability of an isthmic or bulge follicular extension of neoplastic melanocytes. The detection of grey circles, light/dark brown pseudonetwork and light brown structureless areas in lentigo maligna melanoma was associated with the distribution of folliculotropism (focal/diffuse). MiR-146a-5p expression was shown to be significantly greater in melanomas with a mitotic rate ≥1/mm2 as well as in ulcerated lesions compared to those without ulceration. No difference emerged evaluating regression when considering all melanomas subtypes, but an higher expression was noticed in the lentigo maligna melanoma group. Moreover, miR-146a-5p expression was lower in head/neck region cutaneous melanomas with Breslow thickness ≥0.8 mm. These results give further insights for the management of cutaneous melanomas with specific adverse prognostic elements. As the majority of head/neck region cutaneous melanomas are wild type of BRAF and NRAS mutations and not suitable for targeted therapies, the discovery of new molecular targets may provide relevant opportunities for their treatment.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

HER2 overexpression is observed in 20-30% of invasive breast carcinomas and it is correlated with poor prognosis. Although targeted therapies have revolutionized the treatment of HER2-positive breast cancer, a high number of patients presented primary or acquired resistance to monoclonal antibodies and tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Tumor heterogenicity, epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and cancer stem cells are key factors in target therapy resistance and tumor progression. The aim of this project was to discover alternative therapeutic strategies to over-come tumor resistance by harnessing immune system and looking for new targetable molecules. The results reported introduce a virus-like particles-based vaccine against HER2 as promising therapeutic approach to treat HER2-positive tumors. The high and persistent anti-HER2 antibody titers elicited by the vaccine significantly inhibited tumor growth and metastases onset. Furthermore, the polyclonal response induced by the vaccine also inhibited human HER2-positive breast cancer cells resistant to trastuzumab in vitro, suggesting its efficacy also on trastuzumab resistant tumors. To identify new therapeutic targets to treat progressed breast cancer, we took advantage from a dynamic model of HER2 expression obtained in our laboratory, in which HER2 loss and cancer progression were associated with the acquisition of EMT and stemness features. Targeting EMT-involved molecules, such as PDGFR-β, or the induction of epithelial markers, like E-cadherin, proved to be successful strategy to impair HER2-negative tumor growth. Density alterations, which might be induced by anti-HER2 target therapies, in cell culture condition of a cell line with a labile HER2 expression, caused HER2 loss probably as consequence of more aggressive subpopulations which prevail over the others. These subpopulations showed an increased EMT and stemness profile, confirming that targeting EMT-involved molecules or antigen expressed by cancer stem cells together with anti-HER2 target therapies is a valid strategy to inhibit HER2-positive cells and simultaneously prevent selection of more aggressive clone.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The Consensus Molecular Subtypes (CMSs) classification stratifies colorectal cancer (CRC) into four well-defined molecular subgroups, providing incredible support to personalized medicine. Indeed, the huge inter-patient heterogeneity observed in CRC makes it difficult to define a therapeutic strategy from which every patient can benefit. Unfortunately, so far really few targetable biomarkers are known in the CRC setting, leading to an urgent need for new targeted therapies. Here we performed a bioinformatic meta-analysis over a cohort of 1700 CMS-stratified CRC patients, identifying a negative correlation between high levels of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) expression and relapse-free survival, exclusively in the CMS1 subtype. No correlation with ALK expression was pointed out in the other three subgroups. The association of ALK with CMS1 led to generate the hypothesis that ALK pharmacological inhibition may elicit therapeutic potential in this subgroup. Thus, we tested ALK inhibitors and an ALK-directed ADC on several CRC in vitro models, stratified according to the CMS classification as well as on CRC patient-derived organoids and mice. ALK interception strongly inhibited CMS1-cells, organoids, and tumor proliferation and was responsible for the dampening of ALK activation along with the downstream. Mechanistically, we found that CMS1 cells display several mRNA copies of both ALK and ALKAL2 ligand, suggesting a role for ALK abundance in the differential response to its inhibition. Collectively, these findings support the hypothesis that ALK may represent an attractive target for CMS1 colorectal cancer therapy.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The COVID-19 pandemic, sparked by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, stirred global comparisons to historical pandemics. Initially presenting a high mortality rate, it later stabilized globally at around 0.5-3%. Patients manifest a spectrum of symptoms, necessitating efficient triaging for appropriate treatment strategies, ranging from symptomatic relief to antivirals or monoclonal antibodies. Beyond traditional approaches, emerging research suggests a potential link between COVID-19 severity and alterations in gut microbiota composition, impacting inflammatory responses. However, most studies focus on severe hospitalized cases without standardized criteria for severity. Addressing this gap, the first study in this thesis spans diverse COVID-19 severity levels, utilizing 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing on fecal samples from 315 subjects. The findings highlight significant microbiota differences correlated with severity. Machine learning classifiers, including a multi-layer convoluted neural network, demonstrated the potential of microbiota compositional data to predict patient severity, achieving an 84.2% mean balanced accuracy starting one week post-symptom onset. These preliminary results underscore the gut microbiota's potential as a biomarker in clinical decision-making for COVID-19. The second study delves into mild COVID-19 cases, exploring their implications for ‘long COVID’ or Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome (PACS). Employing longitudinal analysis, the study unveils dynamic shifts in microbial composition during the acute phase, akin to severe cases. Innovative techniques, including network approaches and spline-based longitudinal analysis, were deployed to assess microbiota dynamics and potential associations with PACS. The research suggests that even in mild cases, similar mechanisms to hospitalized patients are established regarding changes in intestinal microbiota during the acute phase of the infection. These findings lay the foundation for potential microbiota-targeted therapies to mitigate inflammation, potentially preventing long COVID symptoms in the broader population. In essence, these studies offer valuable insights into the intricate relationships between COVID-19 severity, gut microbiota, and the potential for innovative clinical applications.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Tese de Doutoramento em Biologia Molecular e Ambiental (área de especialização em Biologia Celular e Saúde).

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is the most common inflammatory rheumatic disease, affecting almost 1% of the world population. Although the cause of RA remains unknown, the complex interaction between immune mediators (cytokines and effector cells) is responsible for the joint damage that begins at the synovial membrane. Activated macrophages are critical in the pathogenesis of RA and have been shown to specifically express a receptor for the vitamin folic acid (FA), folate receptor (FR). This particular receptor allows internalization of FA-coupled cargo. In this review we will address the potential of nanoparticles as an effective drug delivery system for therapies that will directly target activated macrophages. Special attention will be given to stealth degree of the nanoparticles as a strategy to avoid clearance by macrophages of the mononuclear phagocytic system (MPS). This review summarizes the application of FA-target nanoparticles as drug delivery systems for RA and proposes prospective future directions.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

BACKGROUND: Angiogenesis inhibitors have been developed to block tumour angiogenesis and target vascular endothelial cells. While some of them have already been approved by the health authorities and are successfully integrated into patient care, many others are still under development, and the clinical value of this approach has to be established. OBJECTIVES: To assess the efficacy and toxicity of targeted anti-angiogenic therapies, in addition to chemotherapy, in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Primary endpoints are both progression-free and overall survival. Response rates, toxicity and secondary resectability were secondary endpoints. Comparisons were first-line chemotherapy in combination with angiogenesis inhibitor, to the same chemotherapy without angiogenesis inhibitor; and second-line chemotherapy, to the same chemotherapy without angiogenesis inhibitor. SEARCH STRATEGY: We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, as well as proceedings from ECCO, ESMO and ASCO until November 2008. In addition, reference lists from trials were scanned, experts in the field and drug manufacturers were contacted to obtain further information. SELECTION CRITERIA: Randomized controlled trials on targeted anti-angiogenic drugs in metastatic colorectal cancer (MCRC). DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Data collection and analysis was performed, according to a previously published protocol. Because individual patient data was not provided, aggregate data had to be used for the analysis. Summary statistics for the primary endpoints were hazard ratios (HR's) and their 95% confidence intervals. MAIN RESULTS: At present, eligible first line trials for this meta-analysis were available for bevacizumab (5 trials including 3101 patients) and vatalanib (1 trial which included 1168 patients). The overall HR s for PFS (0.61, 95% CI 0.45 - 0.83) and OS (0.81, 95% 0.73 - 0.90) for the comparison of first-line chemotherapy, with or without bevacizumab, confirms significant benefits in favour of the patients treated with bevacizumab. However, the effect on PFS shows significant heterogeneity. For second-line chemotherapy, with or without bevacizumab, a benefit in both PFS (HR 0.61, 95% CI 0.51 - 0.73) and OS (HR 0.75, 95% CI 0.63-0.89) was demonstrated in a single, randomized trial. While differences in treatment-related deaths and 60-day mortality were not significant, higher incidences in grade III/IV hypertension, arterial thrombembolic events and gastrointestinal perforations were observed in the patients treated with bevacizumab. For valatanib, currently available data showed a non-significant benefit in PFS and OS. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The addition of bevacizumab to chemotherapy of metastatic colorectal cancer prolongs both PFS and OS in first-and second-line therapy.