| Literature DB >> 18439246 |
Birgit Gruenberger1, Werner Scheithauer, Robert Punzengruber, Christoph Zielinski, Dietmar Tamandl, Thomas Gruenberger.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical resection of liver metastases arising from colorectal cancer is considered the only curative treatment option. However, many patients subsequently experience disease recurrence. We prospectively investigated whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy reduces the risk of recurrence following potentially curative liver resection. Special emphasis was directed to the importance of response.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18439246 PMCID: PMC2386791 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-8-120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patients characteristics
| Age, median (range) | 62 (36 to 77) |
| Sex (male/female) | 34/16 |
| ECOG performance status, n (0/1) | 49/1 |
| Disease stage, n (%) | |
| M0/M1 | 15 (30)/35(70) |
| N0/N1,2 | 16 (32)/34 (68) |
| G1/2/3 | 7 (15)/41(81)/2 (4) |
| Number of metastatic lesions (%) | |
| 1 | 15 (30) |
| 2–3 | 11 (22) |
| ≥ 4 | 24 (48) |
| Lymph-node positive primary tumors, n (%) | 34 (68) |
| Duration of metastatic disease < 12 months, n (%) | 37 (74) |
| CEA > 20 ng/mL, n (%) | 15 (30) |
| Synchronous metastases, n (%) | 35 (70) |
ECOG = Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; CEA = carcinoembryonic antigen
Selected adverse events
| Neutropenia | 24 | 2 | - |
| Anemia | 46 | - | - |
| Thrombocytopenia | 38 | - | 2 |
| Nausea | 34 | 0 | - |
| Diarrhea | 12 | 4 | - |
| Vomiting | 6 | 2 | - |
| Fatigue | 8 | - | - |
| Peripheral neuropathy | 44 | 4 | - |
| Hand-foot syndrome | 18 | - | - |
Analysis of efficacy
| Objective response, n (%) | 36 (72) |
| Complete response | 2 (4) |
| Partial response | 34 (68) |
| Stable disease, n (%) | 10 (20) |
| Progressive disease, n (%) | 4 (8) |
| Mean overall survival, months (95% CI) | 38.0 (32.65 to 43.35) |
| Median recurrence-free survival, responders; mts (95% CI) | 24.73 (4.50 to 44.97) |
Figure 1Recurrence-free survival estimates; PR = partial response, SD = stable disease, PD = progressive disease.