Neoadjuvant Treatment Strategies in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Main Pitfalls of Adjuvant Therapy
3. Rationale for Neoadjuvant Therapy
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- To eliminate presumed occult metastatic disease earlier after diagnosis and reduce distant relapse rates.
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- To give some patients time to allow for preoperative conditioning (nutrition, physical training, treatment of comorbidities and symptoms, etc.).
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- To increase complete resection (R0) rates
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- To evaluate the histological response to therapy.
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- To shrink tumors to smaller sizes and reduce involvement of vascular structures, and to facilitate R0 resection, which is associated with improved survival.
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- To downstage the tumor and reduce regional nodal disease and histological poor prognostic factors.
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- To reduce surgical complexity and postoperative complications.
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- To maximize the number of patients completing all cycles of chemotherapy and/or full doses of CRT.
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- To improve tolerance, resulting in a higher rate of treatment compliance and improved dose intensity.
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- To identify patients with rapidly progressive disease who are unlikely to benefit from resection and spare them from nonbeneficial surgery.
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- To test in vivo chemosensitivity and investigate novel sequential treatments and drug combinations.
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- Finally, to increase overall survival (OS) and quality of life of patients with RPC.
4. Main Concerns about Neoadjuvant Therapy
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- Neoadjuvant chemotherapy, of which the main potential advantage is the earlier eradication of distant metastases that are already present at the time of the initial diagnosis. Reducing the delay between diagnosis and start of chemotherapy may reduce the metastatic rate and may improve the prognosis of patients.
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- Neoadjuvant CRT may also downstage the tumor, increase the R0 resection rate, and reduce the risk of local recurrences.
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- Combined neoadjuvant chemotherapy and preoperative CRT has also been tested, mainly in expert centers.
5. Meta-Analysis of Neoadjuvant Therapy
6. Conditioning and Monitoring of the Patient during Neoadjuvant Treatment
7. Major Surveys and Retrospective Studies
8. Randomized Trials of Chemoradiotherapy and Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy
9. Ongoing Randomized Trials
10. Surgical Considerations Following Neoadjuvant Therapy for RPC
10.1. Staging Laparoscopy
10.2. Paraaortic Lymph Node Sampling—Is It Useful or Recommended Following Neoadjuvant Therapy?
10.3. Surgical Management
10.4. Resectability and Resection Margins
10.5. Postoperative Complications after Pancreatectomy Following Neoadjuvant Therapy
10.6. Biological Borderline Pancreatic Cancer
11. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Difference in Postoperative Morbidity and Mortality | Result | Number of Patients | Trend |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mokdad et al. [13] | No | N/A | 15,237 | None |
Ocuin et al. [52] | Yes | NAT patients:
| 6523 | Favors NAT |
Rieser et al. [51] | Yes | US patients:
| 158 | Favors NAT |
Arrington et al. [44] | No | Patients who died within 2 months of diagnosis in the chemotherapy alone group or within 2 months of surgery in the surgical groups were excluded from the survival analyses | 11,699 | None |
Cooper et al. [53] | Yes | NAT patients:
| 1562 | Favors NAT |
Dhir et al. [54] | Yes | NAT patients:
| 73,313 | Favors NAT |
Marchegiani et al. [55] | Yes | NAT patients:
| 445 | None |
Trial | Inclusion Criteria | Design of the Trial | Number of Patients | Primary Endpoint | Secondary Endpoints |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Golcher et al. [57] | Resectable | Surgery (arm A) or CRT with gemcitabine + cisplatin followed by surgery (arm B) | 33 33 | Median OS: 14.4 17.4 (p = 0.96) | Time to progression: 8.7 (A) vs. 8.4 (B); p = 0.95 Tumor resection: 48% (A) vs. 52% (B); p = 0.81 (y)pN0: 30% (A) vs. 39% (B); p = 0.44 |
PACT-15 Reni et al. [58] | Resectable | Surgery followed by gemcitabine (arm A) or Surgery followed by 6 cycles of PEXG (arm B) or 3 cycles of PEXG before and after surgery (arm C) | 26 30 32 | Event free at 1 year: 6 (23%) 15 (50%) 19 (66%) | Median OS: 20.4 (A) (95% CI 14·6–25·8) vs. 26.4 (B) (15·8–26·7) vs. 38.2 (C) (27·3–49·1) (NS) 3-year OS: 35% (A) vs. 43% (B) vs. 55% (C) 5-year OS: 13% (A) vs. 24% (B) vs. 49% (C) |
PREOPANC Versteijine et al. [26] | Resectable: Borderline resectable: | Surgery followed by 6 courses of gemcitabine (arm A) or 3 courses of gemcitabine, the second combined with 15 × 2.4 Gy radiotherapy, followed by surgery and 4 courses of adjuvant gemcitabine (arm B) | 127 119 | Median OS: 19.8 35.2 (p = 0.029) | R0 resection rate: 40% (A) vs. 71% (B); p < 0.001 Serious adverse events: 41% (A) vs. 52% (B); p = 0.096 |
PREOP-02/JSP05 trial Unno et al. [60] | Resectable | Surgery followed by 6 months of S-1 (arm A) or 2 cycles of gemcitabine + S-1 followed by surgery and 6 months of S-1 (arm B) | 182 182 | Median OS: 26.6 36.7 (p = 0.01) | Grade 3 or 4 adverse events (leukopenia, neutropenia): 72.8% (B) Resection rate, R0 rat and morbidity were similar in both arms |
SWOG S1505 Sohal et al. [61] | Resectable | 12 weeks of mFOLFIRINOX before and after surgery (arm A) Or 12 weeks of gemcitabine + nap-paclitaxel before and after surgery (arm B) | 55 47 | 2-year OS: 41.6% 48.8% | Median OS: 22.4 (A) vs. 23.6 (B) Median DFS: 10.9 (A) vs. 14.2 (B); p = 0.87 |
Trial | Inclusion | Modality and Regimens of Neoadjuvant Therapy | Planned Number of Patients | Primary Endpoint(s) | Secondary Endpoints |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
NEOPAC NCT01521702 [64] | R | Gemcitabine + oxaliplatin, 4 cycles or Upfront surgery | 155 155 | +15% in 1-year PFS | PFS; Histological response; OS; Complication rates after surgery; feasibility of adjuvant chemotherapy |
NEOPA NCT01900327 | R and BRPC | Gemcitabine + radiotherapy 50.4 Gy or Upfront surgery + adjuvant gemcitabine | 205 205 | +30% in 3-year OS | R0 resection rate; Frequency of toxicity events; Resectability rate; Rate of intraoperative irregularities; Postoperative complications; Disease progression during adjuvant therapy; DFS, QoL; First site of tumor recurrence |
NorPACT-1 NCT02919787 [65] | R pancreatic head cancer | FOLFIRINOX, 4 cycles (+ 8 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy) or Upfront surgery + mFOLFIRINOX (12) | 54 36 | Reduction in 1-year mortality from 25 to 5% | Overall mortality at one year; DFS; Histopathological response; Complication rate after surgery; Feasibility of chemotherapy; QoL; Health economics |
PANACHE 01- PRODIGE 48 NCT02959879 [66] | R | FOLFIRINOX, 4 cycles (+ 8 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy) or FOLFOX, 4 cycles (+ 8 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy) or Upfront surgery (+ 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy) | 64 64 32 | 1-year survival Chemotherapy completion rate | Adverse events; Post-operative complications; Patients alive and without recurrence; R0 resection rate; QoL |
PREOPANC-2 NL7094 [67] | R and BRPC | Chemoradiation 36 Gy/15 fractions with 3 cycles of gemcitabine, and adjuvant gemcitabine, 4 cycles or FOLFIRINOX, 4 to 8 cycles, and no adjuvant chemotherapy | 184 184 | OS | PFS; Locoregional progression-free interval; Distant metastases-free interval; Resection rate; R0 resection rate; Chemotherapy start rate; Chemotherapy completion rate; Toxicity; Post-operative complications; Radiologic response; Tumor marker response (CA 19–9 CEA); Pathologic response; QoL |
PREOPANC-3 NCT04927780 | R | FOLFIRINOX 8 cycles (+4 cycles in adjuvant setting) or Upfront surgery + FOLFIRINOX 12 cycles | 189 189 | OS | PFS; Distant metastases free survival; Locoregional PFS; Chemotherapy start date, Number of chemotherapy cycles and completion rate; Resection rate, R0 resection rate; N0 resection rate; pathological response; adverse events; CA 19-9 and CEA response: RECIST response; QoL |
NEONAX NCT02047513 [68] | R | Nab-paclitaxel + gemcitabine 2 cycles (+ 4 cycles in adjuvant setting) or Upfront surgery + 6 cycles nab-paclitaxel + gemcitabine | 83 83 | DFS of ≥55% at 18 months in at least one arm | Safety; Morbidity and mortality; Toxicity; Resection rate; Tumor response; R0 resection rate, OS; Tumor recurrence; QoL |
Alliance A021806 NCT04340141 | R | mFOLFIRINOX 8 cycles, (+ 4 cycles in adjuvant setting) or Upfront surgery + mFOLFIRINOX (12 cycles) | 176 176 | OS | DFS; Time to locoregional or distant recurrence; R0 resection rate: pathological response; adverse events; QoL; Nutritional evaluation; Radiomics |
PANDAS PRODIGE 44 NCT02676349 | BRPC | Neoadjuvant mFOLFIRINOX regimen, with or without preoperative concomitant chemoradiotherapy (50.4 Gy + capecitabine) | 45 45 | histological R0 resection margin rate | Toxicites, proportions of resected patients, response rates to treatments, perioperative mortality and morbidity rates, OS, QoL, PFS |
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Lambert, A.; Schwarz, L.; Ducreux, M.; Conroy, T. Neoadjuvant Treatment Strategies in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer. Cancers 2021, 13, 4724. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13184724
Lambert A, Schwarz L, Ducreux M, Conroy T. Neoadjuvant Treatment Strategies in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer. Cancers. 2021; 13(18):4724. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13184724
Chicago/Turabian StyleLambert, Aurélien, Lilian Schwarz, Michel Ducreux, and Thierry Conroy. 2021. "Neoadjuvant Treatment Strategies in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer" Cancers 13, no. 18: 4724. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13184724