BACKGROUND/AIMS: Pancreatic cancer is extremely refractory even to aggressive treatments including surgery, resulting in early metastasis and/or local recurrence. We investigated changes in serum tumor marker CA 19-9 levels during preoperative radiotherapy in conjunction with initial treatment failure. METHODOLOGY: Twenty-three patients presenting with localized disease and an increased serum CA 19-9 level, who were slated to undergo pancreatectomy and/or intraoperative radiotherapy following preoperative radiotherapy were reviewed. CA 19-9 response, the ratio of post-radiotherapy level before laparotomy to pre-radiotherapy level, was analyzed in relation to disease-control time and survival. RESULTS: Eleven patients revealed metastasis at restaging or laparotomy; 12 patients (52%) completed aggressive treatments. Initial failure was identified at the liver (52%), peritoneum (52%), or local site (26%) with a median disease-control time of 91 days; 7 patients showed combined failure. All but 1 patient died of cancer with a median survival time of 264 days. CA 19-9 response (range: 0-1185%) did not correlate with disease-control time or survival; 8 progressive-disease patients (> 140% response), however, showed significantly shorter disease-control time than 15 nonprogressive-disease patients (< or = 140% response). CONCLUSIONS: CA 19-9 monitoring is useful in preoperative radiotherapy for identifying patients who will not benefit by succeeding aggressive treatments by predicting early metastasis.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Pancreatic cancer is extremely refractory even to aggressive treatments including surgery, resulting in early metastasis and/or local recurrence. We investigated changes in serum tumor marker CA 19-9 levels during preoperative radiotherapy in conjunction with initial treatment failure. METHODOLOGY: Twenty-three patients presenting with localized disease and an increased serum CA 19-9 level, who were slated to undergo pancreatectomy and/or intraoperative radiotherapy following preoperative radiotherapy were reviewed. CA 19-9 response, the ratio of post-radiotherapy level before laparotomy to pre-radiotherapy level, was analyzed in relation to disease-control time and survival. RESULTS: Eleven patients revealed metastasis at restaging or laparotomy; 12 patients (52%) completed aggressive treatments. Initial failure was identified at the liver (52%), peritoneum (52%), or local site (26%) with a median disease-control time of 91 days; 7 patients showed combined failure. All but 1 patient died of cancer with a median survival time of 264 days. CA 19-9 response (range: 0-1185%) did not correlate with disease-control time or survival; 8 progressive-diseasepatients (> 140% response), however, showed significantly shorter disease-control time than 15 nonprogressive-disease patients (< or = 140% response). CONCLUSIONS: CA 19-9 monitoring is useful in preoperative radiotherapy for identifying patients who will not benefit by succeeding aggressive treatments by predicting early metastasis.
Authors: Ching-Wei D Tzeng; Aparna Balachandran; Mediha Ahmad; Jeffrey E Lee; Sunil Krishnan; Huamin Wang; Christopher H Crane; Robert A Wolff; Gauri R Varadhachary; Peter W T Pisters; Thomas A Aloia; Jean-Nicolas Vauthey; Jason B Fleming; Matthew H G Katz Journal: HPB (Oxford) Date: 2013-08-29 Impact factor: 3.647
Authors: Matthew H G Katz; Gauri R Varadhachary; Jason B Fleming; Robert A Wolff; Jeffrey E Lee; Peter W T Pisters; Jean-Nicolas Vauthey; Eddie K Abdalla; Charlotte C Sun; Huamin Wang; Christopher H Crane; Jeffrey H Lee; Eric P Tamm; James L Abbruzzese; Douglas B Evans Journal: Ann Surg Oncol Date: 2010-02-17 Impact factor: 5.344