Reuters Health Information: Chemo pump implant after resecting colorectal liver metastases improves survival
Chemo pump implant after resecting colorectal liver metastases improves survival
Last Updated: 2017-05-05
By Joan Stephenson
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Adjuvant chemotherapy delivered
directly to the liver via an implanted hepatic artery infusion
(HAI) pump is associated with improved survival in colorectal
cancer patients following complete resection of liver
metastases, a new study shows.
Use of adjuvant HAI chemotherapy in such patients, given in
addition to adjuvant systemic chemotherapy, �was strongly
associated with much better survival� than use of adjuvant
systemic chemotherapy alone, senior author Dr. Michael I.
D�Angelica told Reuters Health by email.
�The average improvement in overall survival was 2 years,�
noted Dr. D�Angelica, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
in New York City.
Resection for limited colorectal-cancer liver metastases is
potentially curative, but the majority of patients experience
recurrent disease and most die. Studies of adjuvant systemic
chemotherapy to improve outcomes after resection have been
�disappointing,� with no demonstration of improved survival, Dr.
D�Angelica said.
Because the hepatic artery provides most of the blood supply
to the liver, which has a high �first-pass extraction� of
chemotherapy drugs such as floxuridine, using an HAI pump to
deliver such drugs makes it possible to deliver a high dosage to
the liver with little systemic exposure.
However, adjuvant HAI chemotherapy has not been widely
adopted, even though some studies have suggested that it offers
a survival advantage following resection. One reason is that
earlier studies �were performed before the introduction of
modern systemic therapy such as oxaliplatin and irinotecan,� Dr.
D�Angelica and colleagues say.
The current study analyzed data from a database with
information on all patients who underwent complete resection of
colorectal liver metastases from 1992 to 2012 at Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center. Patients who received adjuvant HAI
chemotherapy also received preoperative and/or adjuvant systemic
chemotherapy.
Characteristics and outcomes of 1,583 patients (67%) who
were treated without HAI chemotherapy were compared with those
of 785 patients (33%) who received the treatment. Median
follow-up of survivors was 55 months.
Even though patients who received HAI chemotherapy had more
advanced disease, their median overall survival was longer than
those who did not (67 months vs. 44 months; p<0.001), the
researchers report in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, online
April 20.
Both five-year and 10-year overall survival rates were
significantly greater among those who received adjuvant HAI
chemotherapy (about 53% vs. 38% at five years and about 38% vs.
24% at 10 years; p<0.001 for both comparisons).
Receiving HAI was associated with longer survival in both
�early� (1992 to 2002) and �late� (2003 to 2012) eras, the
latter reflecting the emergence of modern systemic chemotherapy.
Median overall survival was 60 months vs. 40 months during the
early era, and 72 months vs. 51 months during the late era, with
or without HAI, respectively.
Propensity-score analysis to match patients for seven known
prognostic factors also found longer overall survival with
perioperative HAI (hazard ratio, 0.67; p<0.001).
�The strong association was independent of the use of modern
systemic chemotherapy and remained in propensity score
analysis,� the researchers noted.
Subgroup analyses found that patients with node-negative
primary tumors or a low clinical risk score (reflecting a
combination of prognostic factors such as the number and size of
metastases) appeared to benefit the most from HAI chemotherapy.
Dr. D�Angelica said he was not surprised by improved
survival in patients who received HAI chemotherapy.
�We have seen dramatically improved outcomes with adjuvant
hepatic-artery chemotherapy for a long time now,� he said. �This
was the first study, however, that had adequate numbers of
patients and follow-up to perform a complete comparative
analysis.�
The new study �provides data that strongly supports
investment (in) a definitive multicenter randomized controlled
trial that would definitively test this concept,� Dr. D�Angelica
said.
The inclusion of 10-year overall survival, which essentially
equates with cure in this patient population (38% in patients
treated with HAI chemotherapy vs. 24% in those treated without),
is one of the study�s strengths, Dr. Paul J. Karanicolas, of the
Edmond Odette Cancer Centre at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
in Toronto, Canada, told Reuters Health by email.
These �impressive results� are despite the fact that the
patients who received HAI chemotherapy generally had more
advanced disease, with a higher likelihood of recurrence, noted
Dr. Karanicolas, who was not involved in the current study.
�One surprising finding . . . is that patients with earliest
disease, measured with the clinical risk score, seemed to
benefit the most from the treatment,� he said.
Dr. Karanicolas said that applying the results of this study
to practice presents a challenge, because HAI chemotherapy
requires expertise in hepatobiliary surgery, medical oncology,
interventional radiology, nuclear medicine, and nursing.
�It should only be offered in the context of an established
multidisciplinary program with expertise in all of these areas,�
he said.
The study had no commercial funding, and the authors
reported no disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2qtXAiF
J Clin Oncol 2017.
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