Reuters Health Information: Adjuvant chemo of questionable value in resected gallbladder cancer
Adjuvant chemo of questionable value in resected gallbladder cancer
Last Updated: 2016-10-21
By David Douglas
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Patients who undergo surgery for
gallbladder cancer don't appear to benefit from adjuvant
chemotherapy, according to new research.
As Dr. Adam J. Olszewski told Reuters Health by email, "Our
study, as disheartening as it may seem, contradicts prior
retrospective (and unfortunately flawed) analyses that suggested
survival benefits of adjuvant chemotherapy in resected
gallbladder cancer."
Dr. Olszewski of the Alpert Medical School of Brown
University, Providence, Rhode Island, and colleagues analyzed
data from the National Cancer Data Base on more than 4,700
patients who underwent surgery for T2-3 or node-positive,
nonmetastatic gallbladder cancer between 2004 and 2011.
The data, said Dr. Olszewski, indicate "that only a minority
of patients in the U.S. undergo radical resections, which should
alert clinicians about the need to standardize and optimize the
surgical approach."
Adjuvant chemotherapy was given to 28.8% of patients and
13.5% received upfront chemoradiation, the researchers report in
the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, online October 5.
Overall survival at three years was 39.9% and appeared
unaffected by adjuvant therapy after adjusting for multiple
confounders (hazard ratio, 1.01).
Patients with T3 or node-positive tumors treated with
upfront adjuvant chemoradiation had a modest early survival
advantage. The absolute difference was 6.8% at two years, but by
five years the difference was lost.
"This result suggests that single-agent chemotherapy with
gemcitabine or a fluoropyrimidine may not be sufficient to
overcome the poor prognosis associated with this aggressive
cancer, highlighting the need for further research incorporating
recent advances in the management of metastatic disease and
accumulating knowledge about molecular pathways," said Dr.
Olszewski.
"Our results," he concluded, "further illustrate that
hepatobiliary cancers are not all the same, and the widespread
practice of data extrapolation between studies on cancers of the
gallbladder, pancreas, or biliary ducts may lead to erroneous
conclusions."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2dsLroi
J Natl Cancer Inst 2016.
|