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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

New Drug Blocking Tumor Blood Supply Shows Promise in Extending Survival for Children with Bone Cancer

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
October 23, 2025
in Cancer
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Ewing sarcoma stands as one of the most aggressive and common bone malignancies afflicting children, notorious for its poor prognosis once it has metastasized extensively. The complexity of treating multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma lies not only in its aggressive spread but also in the limited efficacy of existing treatment modalities, which often offer dismal survival rates. Historical data reveal that fewer than 25% of pediatric patients diagnosed with multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma survive beyond five years post-diagnosis, underscoring an urgent need for therapeutic advancements. Recently, clinical research has spotlighted a promising therapeutic candidate: pazopanib, a drug initially developed for renal cell carcinoma but now showing remarkable potential in improving outcomes for these young patients.

Pazopanib’s triad of actions — inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFR), platelet-derived growth factor receptors (PDGFR), and c-KIT — disrupts the angiogenic pathways crucial for tumor survival. Tumors rely heavily on angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels, to sustain rapid growth and metastasis. By targeting these pathways, pazopanib effectively starves tumors, preventing nutrient delivery and impeding their ability to expand. This mechanism, when integrated with conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy protocols, could potentially amplify therapeutic efficacy by weakening tumors’ defenses and sensitizing them to cytotoxic agents and radiation damage.

A recent observational study conducted at the Warsaw Mother and Child Institute involved a small cohort of eleven pediatric patients aged 5 to 17 years, all diagnosed with primary multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma. These patients received pazopanib in conjunction with standard first-line treatments, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and, in some cases, surgical intervention or stem cell transplantation. Treatment with pazopanib was carefully monitored over an average period of 1.7 years. This regimen was strategically paused during surgical procedures and halted should disease progression or unacceptable toxicity emerge. The study emphasized rigorous imaging and laboratory evaluations to assess tumor response and closely track adverse effects.

Remarkably, the addition of pazopanib demonstrated a significant impact on clinical outcomes. Approximately 85.7% of patients survived two years post-diagnosis, a stark improvement compared to historical survival benchmarks in this patient population. Furthermore, nearly 68.2% experienced no disease progression at two years, indicating substantial stabilization or regression of their malignancies. Though one patient succumbed to the disease, and others experienced relapse or progression, the majority exhibited positive responses— a valuable beacon of hope for clinicians and families grappling with this devastating diagnosis.

The tolerability profile of pazopanib in these pediatric patients was notably favorable. Despite concerns about the cumulative toxicity when combining multiple cancer treatments, pazopanib’s side effects were minimal and manageable, allowing patients to maintain a reasonable quality of life. Importantly, after completion of intravenous treatments, patients were able to continue pazopanib therapy orally at home, reducing hospital visits and enabling a semblance of normalcy for these children during arduous treatment periods. This oral administration potentially offers a practical advantage in long-term management of multi-metastatic disease.

From a mechanistic perspective, pazopanib’s role in hindering angiogenesis is particularly crucial in Ewing sarcoma, which is characterized by aggressive vascular invasion and rapid metastatic dissemination. By impairing these blood vessel networks, the drug targets the tumor microenvironment—a growing focus of cancer therapeutics aimed at disrupting the supportive niche tumors require for expansion. Additionally, when administered early in the treatment course, pazopanib might augment the susceptibility of tumor cells to chemotherapy and radiation by depriving them of angiogenic protection mechanisms.

The implications of this research are profound, yet the authors prudently caution against premature changes to standard care protocols pending validation through larger, multicentric randomized clinical trials. Multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma’s rarity poses challenges for recruitment and statistical power in such expansive studies, but collaborative international efforts could overcome these hurdles. The promising early outcomes documented at the Warsaw Mother and Child Institute set a compelling precedent to explore pazopanib’s benefits further and might inspire novel clinical trial designs integrating targeted therapies into pediatric oncology.

Beyond survival metrics, the study highlights an encouraging qualitative dimension: the remarkably good quality of life maintained by patients during combined treatment phases. Cancer therapy in children often involves balancing efficacy against the risk of debilitating side effects and long-lasting toxicities. Pazopanib’s manageable safety profile and the possibility of transitioning to outpatient oral therapy align well with the goal of minimizing treatment burden, preserving patient well-being, and supporting developmental needs.

This investigational approach—combining targeted therapy with traditional oncological modalities—reflects the broader oncological paradigm shift toward precision medicine. Instead of solely relying on non-specific cytotoxic treatments, integrating molecularly targeted agents like pazopanib addresses cancer’s multifaceted biology, potentially enhancing outcomes and reducing attrition through drug resistance. Pediatric oncology, historically slower to adopt such strategies due to drug approval complexities and safety concerns, now stands at the cusp of significant therapeutic evolution driven by such pioneering studies.

It remains to be seen whether pazopanib’s efficacy observed in children will extend to other malignancies characterized by robust angiogenesis and metastasis or if combination regimens can be optimized to maximize synergistic effects. Ongoing pharmacodynamic studies to elucidate the ideal dosing, timing, and combination partners for pazopanib will be essential to consolidate its role within multi-modality treatment frameworks. Furthermore, biomarker research may enable selection of patients most likely to respond, enhancing personalized treatment approaches and avoiding unnecessary exposure among non-responders.

The hope expressed by Prof Anna Raciborska and her colleagues, who led this groundbreaking observational study, is that future funding and international partnerships, perhaps facilitated by European Union programs, will catalyze extensive clinical trials. Such efforts are crucial to move from promising preliminary data to evidence-based standard practice changes that can transform the prognosis of children suffering with multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma globally.

Ultimately, these findings inject renewed hope into an area of pediatric oncology that has experienced limited progress for decades. Pazopanib’s potential to extend survival with manageable toxicity represents a pivotal step forward, underscoring the importance of continuing to explore, validate, and expand the therapeutic arsenal against this life-threatening disease. It is an urgent call to the scientific community to harness targeted therapies in concert with conventional treatments, advancing toward the long-sought goal of turning multi-metastatic Ewing sarcoma from a deadly diagnosis into a manageable condition.

Subject of Research: People
Article Title: PAZOPANIB IN PATIENTS WITH PRIMARY MULTI-METASTATIC BONE
News Publication Date: 23-Oct-2025
Web References: 10.3389/fonc.2025.1653015
References: Article published in Frontiers in Oncology
Keywords: Ewing sarcoma, multi-metastatic bone cancer, pediatric oncology, pazopanib, targeted therapy, angiogenesis inhibition, survival rate, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, quality of life, observational study, cancer treatment innovation

Tags: combination chemotherapy and pazopanibdrug development for aggressive cancersenhancing outcomes for pediatric patientsEwing sarcoma treatment advancementsimproving survival rates in childreninnovative therapies for pediatric malignanciesmulti-metastatic Ewing sarcoma challengesnovel approaches in cancer treatmentpazopanib in cancer therapypediatric bone cancer drugstargeting VEGFR and PDGFR in tumorstumor angiogenesis inhibition

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