| Literature DB >> 26511950 |
Giorgi Nadiradze1, Urs Giger-Pabst2, Juergen Zieren2, Dirk Strumberg3, Wiebke Solass4, Marc-André Reymond5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC) is a novel technique of intraperitoneal chemotherapy. First results obtained with PIPAC in patients with advanced peritoneal metastasis (PM) from gastric cancer (GC) are presented.Entities:
Keywords: Cisplatin; Doxorubicin; Gastric cancer; Intraperitoneal chemotherapy; Peritoneal metastasis; Pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26511950 PMCID: PMC4722080 DOI: 10.1007/s11605-015-2995-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastrointest Surg ISSN: 1091-255X Impact factor: 3.452
Characteristics of 24 patients with PC from gastric origin undergoing pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC)
| Variable | Value |
|---|---|
| Number of patients | 24 |
| Sex (M/F) | 12:12 |
| Age, years (±SD) | 56 (±13) |
| Histology (Lauren classification) | |
| Diffuse/signet ring | 18 |
| Mixed | 1 |
| Intestinal | 5 |
| Extraperitoneal metastasis | 4 (17 %) |
| Pleura | 3 |
| Liver | 1 |
| Peritoneal Carcinomatosis Index (mean ± SD) | 16 (±10) |
| Karnofsky Index before first PIPAC (mean ± SD) | 78 (±22 %) |
| Previous organ surgery | 15/24 (63 %) |
| Previous (radio)chemotherapy | 19 (79 %) |
| ≥3 lines | 4 |
| 2 lines | 7 |
| 1 line | 8 |
| Contraindication for chemotherapy | 3 |
| Patient refusal | 2 |
| Simultaneous chemotherapy | 8 (33 %) |
Adverse events
| Patient | Operation | Response | CTCAE grading | Adverse event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 × PIPAC, small bowel resection | CR | 1 | Abdominal pain |
| 2 | 1 × PIPAC | N/A | 1 | CRP |
| 3 | 4 × PIPAC | CR | 1 | CRP |
| 4 | 1× PIPAC, ileostomy | N/A | 3 | CRP, Cholangitis |
| 5 | 4 × PIPAC | PR | 3 | Hepatotoxicity, abdominal pain |
| 6 | 2× PIPAC | SD | 1 | CRP |
| 7 | 4× PIPAC | PD | 1 | CRP |
| 8 | 1× PIPAC | N/A | 1 | Abdominal pain |
| 9 | 5× PIPAC | CR | 1 | Abdominal pain, CRP |
| 10 | 5 × PIPAC, adhesiolysis, incisional hernia repair | CR | 1 | Hepatotoxicity, CRP |
| 11 | 4× PIPAC | PR | 4 | Allergy, myolysis |
| 12 | 3× PIPAC, small bowel resection | PR | 3 | Hepatotoxicity, abdominal pain |
| 13 | 3× PIPAC | CR | 1 | Abdominal pain, CRP |
| 14 | 1× PIPAC | N/A | 1 | CRP |
| 15 | 2× PIPAC | PR | 1 | CRP |
| 16 | 2× PIPAC | PR | 1 | N/V, CRP |
| 17 | 3× PIPAC | SD | 1 | Renal toxicity, CRP |
| 18 | 2× PIPAC, gastrectomy | CR | 1 | CRP |
| 19 | 2× PIPAC | PR | 5 | CRP, Hepatotoxicity, progressive SBO, death |
| 20 | 1× PIPAC | N/A | 3 | CRP, Hepatotoxicity |
| 21 | 2× PIPAC | PD | 3 | Hepatotoxicity |
| 22 | 1× PIPAC | N/A | 5 | Ascites decompensation, death |
| 23 | 5× PIPAC | SD | 3 | Hepatotoxicity, CRP, 2 × Access lesion |
| 24 | 1× PIPAC | N/A | 1 | Access site extravasation |
PIPAC pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy, CRS cytoreductive surgery, CTCAE Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events Version 4.0, CR complete remission, PR partial remission, SD stable disease, PD progressive disease, CRP C-reactive protein, RT renal toxicity, N/V nausea–vomiting, SBO small bowel obstruction
Fig. 1PIPAC is well tolerated. Although the dose applied is only 10 % of a usual systemic dose, patients develop a postoperative inflammatory syndrome with elevated C-reactive protein, probably explained by a chemical peritonitis. However, acute and cumulative local toxicities of PIPAC are well controlled and no bowel perforation and no gastrointestinal side effects > CTCAE grade 2 were observed
Fig. 2Fifty-one years old female patient after R1 gastrectomy, postoperative chemotherapy (FLOT), and radiochemotherapy (5-FU) for GC, intestinal type, pT3 pN2 pM1 (per). Videolaparoscopy (a1) and CT scan (a2) at PIPAC#1 showing multiple small bowel involvement (white arrows) and radiological diffuse small bowel thickening (red arrows). At PIPAC # 4, videolaparoscopy shows a complete macroscopic response (b1) and CT a complete radiological response according to RECIST 1.1 criteria (b2). Number sign: micropump placed into the abdomen during laparoscopy. Asterisk: local peritonectomy scar. Multiple biopsies confirm major remission with extensive fibrosis and isolated vital tumor cells. Patient was alive 148 days after 1st PIPAC with a KI of 90 %
Fig. 3Kaplan-Meier survival curve of 24 consecutive patients after PIPAC salvage therapy with cisplatin and doxorubicin. x-axis: survival in months; y-axis: cumulative survival. Green line: patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) plus other metastases. Blue line: patients with PC without other metastases