Reuters Health Information: New score points to intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma outcome
New score points to intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma outcome
Last Updated: 2017-03-23
By David Douglas
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A simplified prognostic score
may increase the accuracy of survival prediction after
hepatectomy for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC), according
to California-based researchers.
As Dr. Gagandeep Singh told Reuters Health by email, "The
relative rarity of intrahepatic bile duct cancers and the
paucity of data to help guide management make this cancer a
difficult problem to treat."
Dr. Singh and colleagues at the City of Hope National
Medical Center in Duarte analyzed data on 275 patients with a
median age of 65 years who underwent liver resection. Median
follow-up for all patients was 23 months.
The most common surgical complication was hemorrhage or the
need for blood transfusion which was seen in 43 patients
(15.6%), the team reports in JAMA Surgery, online March 15. The
most common postoperative medical morbidity was respiratory
complication seen in 32 patients (11.6%).
No significant differences in overall complication rate was
seen between tumors that were intrahepatic, small and solitary
and those that had extrahepatic extension and were large and
multifocal.
However, a multivariate Cox proportional hazards model
showed that multifocality, extrahepatic extension, grade, node
positivity and age greater than 60 years were independently
associated with worse overall survival.
For example, overall survival at one year was 55.1% for ICCs
with contiguous organ involvement and 82.5% without such
involvement. Corresponding proportions at five years were 18.9%
and 27.2%.
The team used the variables identified to develop the MEGNA
prognostic score which was validated using information on 261
patients from the non-Californian SEER registries.
�The MEGNA prognostic score," they note, "demonstrated
excellent predictive accuracy for probability of survival in all
prognostic groups."
The prognostic separation/discrimination index was 0.21 with
the MEGNA prognostic score versus 0.17 and 0.18 with the staging
systems of the American Joint Committee on Cancer sixth and
seventh editions, respectively.
This new guideline, continued Dr. Singh, first demonstrates
the safety "of what many may consider ambitious resections
(large, multifocal or tumors with extrahepatic extension) for
intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas. Second, we establish the
factors important in predicting morbidity and mortality after
such resections. Most importantly, we have developed and
validated a prognostic score that is very easy to use, accurate
and is superior to current staging systems."
"This prognostic score," he continued, "will allow doctors
to discuss the prognosis with patients and their families after
surgical resection. Many times the decision to operate is
complex. A surgeon must weigh the potential oncologic benefit
against the risk of complications from the operation. Given that
the prognostic score can be calculated from information obtained
prior to surgery, we anticipate that it will also help guide the
decision to perform (or not perform) a potentially morbid
operation."
In an accompanying editorial, Dr. David C. Linehan of the
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, New
York, and colleagues observe that this and other studies "may
court more controversy than answers regarding ICC staging.
Ultimately, a staging system based on only preoperative values
would be ideal to predict the outcome prior to deciding whether
to offer surgical treatment. However, first we need to obtain a
consensus on the true predictive factors for ICC outcome."
Dr. Gregory J. Gores of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester,
Minnesota, who studies liver-cancer treatments, told Reuters
Health by email, "I agree this is a useful staging system
further clarifying who may or may not benefit from surgery for
intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma."
However, he added, "It is disappointing they did not have
the tumor marker serum CA 19-9 available for the analysis."
"The major advance," concluded Dr. Gores, "is that the
staging system helps clarify the role of tumor multicentricity
and outcome following surgery. Overall, outcomes are still not
optimal following surgical resection of this disease
highlighting the need for further advances."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2naloDV and http://bit.ly/2mXCGDc
JAMA Surg 2017.
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