Soft-tissue sarcomas (STS) are a wide group of rare cancers of mesendothelial cells. Its inhibition might therefore also have indirect and enchymal origin. Treatment modalities include surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy,mostly… Click to show full abstract
Soft-tissue sarcomas (STS) are a wide group of rare cancers of mesendothelial cells. Its inhibition might therefore also have indirect and enchymal origin. Treatment modalities include surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy,mostly depending on the stage of the disease, its anatomical location, and histological subtype [1]. The cornerstone of STS medical therapy for locally unresectable and metastatic cases has been chemotherapy with anthracyclines for more than 40 years [1]; all other therapeutic agents showing little to no benefit compared to an anthracycline monotherapy. Despite seemingly negative results in a large phase III trial, the combination of an anthracycline with ifosfamide is often considered by clinicians in cases where tumor shrinkage or symptoms' control are a priority [2]. In patients with a high-risk disease where surgery alone might severely compromise organ function or anatomy, radiation therapy (RT) is considered a standard treatment modality, especially in the neoadjuvant setting [1], alone or in combination with chemotherapy [3]. In 2016, this scenario was suddenly subverted by an open-label phase Ib and randomized phase II trial showing an impressive 1-year benefit in overall survival with the addition of olaratumab –a monoclonal antibody targeting PDGFRα– to doxorubicin [4]. Surprisingly, in the pivotal phase Ib/II trial, tumor PDGFRα expression did not have any positive predictive value [4], raising questions on the postulated mechanism of action of olaratumab [5]. These data led to the provisional approval of olaratumab in the first-line treatment of STS both in the U.S.A. and in Europe, pending the results of the confirmatory phase III clinical trial ANNOUNCE. Unfortunately, Eli Lilly and Company in January 2019 reported the results of this trial, which did not meet the primary endpoints of overall survival in the full study population or in the leiomyosarcoma subpopulation, with no difference in survival between the study arms for either population [6]. U.S. and European regulatory agencies decided to halt prescription of olaratumab to newly diagnosed STS patients previously eligible for this treatment. The full publication of these data later this year is awaited for a complete evaluation of the trial. After these results, it becomes of paramount importance to better understand whether PDGFRα inhibition might still have any role in STS therapy, and if so, the molecular mechanisms involved. To increase the complexity, it must be considered that PDGFRα expression is spatially and temporally dynamic, and it is not restricted to tumor cells, being also present in tumor-associated fibroblasts and vascular
               
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