
Bladder Preservation Therapy for Muscle‐Invading Bladder Cancers on Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Trials 8802, 8903, 9506, and 9706: Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor B Overexpression Predicts for Increased Distant Metastasis and Shorter Survival
Author(s) -
Lautenschlaeger Tim,
George Asha,
Klimowicz Alexander C.,
Efstathiou Jason A.,
Wu ChinLee,
Sandler Howard,
Shipley William U.,
Tester William J.,
Hagan Michael P.,
Magliocco Anthony M.,
Chakravarti Arnab
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the oncologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.176
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1549-490X
pISSN - 1083-7159
DOI - 10.1634/theoncologist.2012-0461
Subject(s) - medicine , bladder cancer , vascular endothelial growth factor , cystectomy , radiation therapy , urology , metastasis , oncology , pathology , cancer , vegf receptors
Background. From 1988 to 1999, the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) conducted four prospective studies (8802, 8903, 9506, 9706) of patients with clinical stage T2–4a muscle‐invasive bladder cancer. Treatment was selective bladder preservation using transurethral surgery (TURBT) plus cisplatin‐based induction and consolidation chemoradiation regimens, reserving radical cystectomy for invasive tumor recurrence. We investigated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) pathway biomarkers in this unique clinical dataset (median follow‐up of 3.1 years). Methods. A total of 43 patients with tissue available from the entry TURBT were included in this analysis. Expression of VEGF ligands and receptors were quantified and scored by the AQUA platform (HistoRX, now Genoptix, Carlsbad, CA) and analyzed after median split. Results. VEGF expression levels were not associated with increased rates of complete response to induction chemoradiation. Higher levels of cytoplasmic VEGF‐B, VEGF‐C, and VEGF‐R2 were associated with decreased overall survival rates. The 3‐year overall survival estimates for high and low expressers were 43.7% and 75% for VEGF‐B cytoplasm ( p = .01), 40.2% and 86.7% for VEGF‐C cytoplasm ( p = .01), and 49.7% and 66.7% for VEGF‐R2 cytoplasm ( p = .02). Higher expression levels of cytoplasm VEGF‐B were associated with higher rates of distant failure ( p = .01). Conclusions. Although VEGF ligands and receptors do not appear to be associated with complete response to induction chemoradiation for muscle‐invasive bladder cancer, we report significant associations with overall survival and distant failure for certain VEGF family members.