Literature DB >> 27172250

A phase II study of a modified FOLFOX6 regimen as neoadjuvant chemotherapy for locally advanced gastric cancer.

Xiang Wang1, Lin Zhao1, Hongfeng Liu2, Dingrong Zhong3, Wei Liu4, Guangliang Shan5, Fen Dong5, Weisheng Gao2, Chunmei Bai1, Xiaoyi Li2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We evaluated the efficacy and safety of the modified FOLFOX6 (mFOLFOX6) regimen as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy in gastric cancer patients.
METHODS: Seventy-three patients with T2-T4 or N+ were enroled. Preoperative chemotherapy consisted of three cycles of mFOLFOX6. The primary end points were the response rate and the R0 resection rate. Prognostic factors for overall survival (OS) were investigated using univariate and multivariate analyses.
RESULTS: Sixty-seven (91.8%) patients completed 3 cycles, with grade 3-4 toxicity arising in 33.0%. The radiology response rate was 45.8%. Sixty-seven (91.8%) patients receiving radical surgery showed different levels of histological regression of the primary tumour, with a ⩾50% regression rate of 49.2%. ypTNM stage (HR 4.045, 95% CI 1.429-11.446) and tumours of diffuse and mixed type (HR 9.963, 95% CI 1.937-51.235; HR 8.890, 95% CI 1.157-68.323, respectively) were significantly associated with OS. The pathologic regression rate (GHR; ⩾2/3/<2/3, ⩾50%/<50%) was statistically significantly associated with OS according to a univariate analysis.
CONCLUSIONS: Perioperative mFOLFOX6 was a tolerable and effective regimen for gastric cancer. The ypTNM stage was an independent predictor of survival. GHR ⩾50%/<50% could be used as a surrogate marker for selecting a postoperative chemotherapy regimen.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27172250      PMCID: PMC4984457          DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2016.126

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


Since Wilke ) first reported the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for treating gastric cancer in 1989, the potential benefits of downstaging the primary tumour, facilitating complete surgical resection and treating systemic micrometastases have received much attention. Especially in recent years, clinical research (Cunningham ; Lutz ; Ychou ) has indicated that preoperative chemotherapy for gastric cancer (neoadjuvant chemotherapy) could improve the R0 resection rate in surgery for advanced gastric cancer and overall survival (OS). The Medical Research Council Adjuvant Gastric Infusion Chemotherapy (MAGIC) trial published in 2006 (Cunningham ) showed that perioperative chemotherapy could increase the 5-year survival rate from 23 to 36% the difference in the rates of postoperative complications between the surgery group and the perioperative-chemotherapy group was not statistically significant. Hence, since 2008, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Guideline has recommended a regimen of epirubicin, cisplatin and infused fluorouracil (ECF) as the standard neoadjuvant approach for T2 and higher staging of gastric cancer (NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology, 2007). Li ) published a meta-analysis that included 2271 patients with advanced gastric cancer, and the results indicated that neoadjuvant chemotherapy could improve the tumour stage, increase the R0 resection rate and provide survival benefits for patients with locally advanced gastric cancer (OR=1.27, 95% confidence interval:1.04–1.55). However, these clinical studies included different neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimens and operative approaches; therefore, it is still unclear which chemotherapy regimen is the most effective. Another important role of neoadjuvant chemotherapy is to evaluate the effect of the neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen to guide the selection of the postoperative chemotherapy regimen. However, which method can best evaluate the effect of preoperative chemotherapy, and which standard should be used to determine whether a change in postoperative therapies is required, are the key issues and are still controversial. The best approach is to observe the impact of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on the recurrence and survival rates. However, because both operative approaches and postoperative therapy regimens influence the final outcome of treatments, it is difficult to accurately assess the impact of preoperative chemotherapy on survival outcomes; therefore, histologic and imaging response assessments are the most direct and convenient predictive methods of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The methods for evaluating the response rate by the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (Husband ) and histological response described by the Japanese Gastric Cancer Association (2011) (JCGC) have been used to evaluate the effect of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The correlation between the grade of histologic regression and prognosis has been used in the evaluation of various tumours, including pancreatic cancer, rectal cancer and oesophageal cancer, but the prognostic value of this variable has been mixed and is still controversial in advanced gastric cancer (Lowy ; Breslin ; Onaitis ; Ruo ; Berger ; Chirieac ; Brenner ; Gaca ; Gu ; Mansour ). Therefore, a prospective study was performed in the Department of General Surgery, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, from December 2006 to October 2012. A total of 73 patients were enroled, and the modified FOLFOX6 (mFOLFOX6) was adopted as the regimen of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The aims of the current study were as follows: (1) to analyse the efficacy and safety of the mFOLFOX6 regimen in locally advanced gastric cancer patients and (2) to investigate whether a histologic response or radiographic response was a superior surrogate marker for OS, which can be used to determine the postoperative chemotherapy regimen.

Materials and Methods

Patients

The inclusion criteria were as follows: (1) histologically confirmed gastric or gastroesophageal junction carcinoma; (2) TNM stage of T2–T4 or positive regional lymph nodes according to the AJCC 7.0 staging system, verified by enhanced computed tomography (CT), with no evidence of distant metastases; (3) ECOG performance status score ⩽0–2 and adequate haematological, heart, liver and renal functions; (4) over 18 years old; (5) never received any chemotherapy, radiotherapy or surgical treatments for gastric cancer; and (6) signed the informed consent form. The exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) women in a gestation or lactation period, (2) presence of infectious diseases, (3) watery diarrhoea, (4) complications involving peripheral neuropathy, (5) active bleeding of the gastrointestinal tract, (6) complications involving tumours in other sites except for preinvasive carcinoma and (7) sensitivity to investigational drugs or iodines. The patients were enroled, as we previously described, after providing informed consent according to procedures approved by the Ethics Committee at Peking Union Medical College hospital. The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Peking Union Medical College Hospital and registered on the ClinicalTrails.gov website (registration ID: NCT02226380).

Treatment

The enroled patients were treated with a mFOLFOX6 regimen: a 2-h intravenous injection of oxaliplatin (85 mg m−2) on day 1, a 2-h intravenous injection of leucovorin (400 mg m−2) on day 1, an intravenous injection of 5-FU (400 mg m−2), and then a 46-h continuous infusion (2400 mg m−2) on day 1. The patients received a total of 3 cycles, and each cycle took 2 weeks. If a toxic reaction of level 3 or 4 occurred, the chemotherapeutic dosage of the next cycle was reduced by 20%. Without clear surgical contraindications and with the patients' informed consent, surgery was performed 3–4 weeks after the last chemotherapy treatment. During the treatment, if the patient presented with aggravated symptoms, experienced unbearable drug-specific toxicity or refused to continue chemotherapy due to persistent toxic reactions, the chemotherapy was stopped and surgery was conducted if distant metastases were not discovered. All of the surgical operations in the enroled group were performed by a professional group of surgeons. The R0 resection surgery and D2 lymphadenectomy were required to be as far apart as possible. Postoperative chemotherapy was started 3–4 weeks after surgery, and the regimen was based on the results from the patients' clinical and pathological evaluations. The patients with progressive disease (PD) or a histological response of 0–Ia according to the criteria described by the JCGC were given a modified DCF regimen. Otherwise, we continued the mFOLFOX6 or XELOX program. The pre and postoperative chemotherapies lasted half a year.

Assessment

Assessments were carried out before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, after surgery and after adjuvant chemotherapy. The following assessment techniques were applied: tumour marker analysis and abdominal CT, especially three-dimensional reconstruction CT, which was used as the major imaging assessment method before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Additional imaging was undertaken depending on a clinical suspicion of recurrence. The tumour response to chemotherapy was assessed by an independent radiologist (WL), and the histological evaluation after preoperative therapy was assessed by an independent pathologist (DRZ), both using the criteria described by the JCGC. For the specimens from radical surgery, the presence of tumour necrosis and fibrosis within the lesion was confirmed by the same experienced pathologist (DRZ), and the percentage of residual tumour cells, that is, graded histologic regression (GHR), within the lesion was recorded as 0–100%, with 0% representing no necrosis, or cellular or structural changes within the whole lesion and 100% representing an entire lesion that disappeared or was replaced by fibrous tissue without any viable tumour cells. Toxicity was assessed according to the National Cancer Institute-Common Toxicity Criteria (NCI-CTC; version 3.0; Trotti ).

Follow-up

Patients were followed-up at regular intervals, once every 3 months, either in a clinical visit or by telephone. The last follow-up date was 31 January 2015. During the out-patient review, tumour marker analysis and imaging examination, such as CT scans, were performed regularly (NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology, 2007).

Statistical analysis

The primary end points of this study were the response rate and R0 resection rate, and the secondary end points were the progression-free survival (PFS), OS and safety issues, including adverse events of chemotherapy and complications of surgery. Progression-free survival was defined as the period starting from the initial preoperative chemotherapy to the confirmation of progression of the disease by imaging or pathological diagnosis; OS was defined as the period from initial preoperative chemotherapy to the time of death for any reason. The full-analysis population included patients who had received at least one cycle of chemotherapy. The intention-to-treat population included those who completed the neoadjuvant chemotherapy and received radical surgery. SAS statistical software 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) was used for all of the statistical analyses. The T and N stages confirmed by CT were compared before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and radiological downstaging was confirmed; the pathological downstaging was defined as a reduction in T stage or N stage of pathologic staging (ypTNM) compared with radiological staging before neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The correlation between clinicopathologic factors and the patients' survival outcomes was analysed with univariate and multivariate analyses. A log-rank test was applied to compare the disjoint survival curves, and Wilcoxon's test was used to compare the joint survival curves. The Cox-proportional hazards regression model was used to identify prognostic factors for survival. P<0.05 was statistically significant. All P-value results are from two-sided tests.

Results

General conditions

During the period from December 2006 to October 2012, there were 73 patients enroled in this study. Sixty patients were graded with an ECOG of 0 before chemotherapy (82.2%), and 13 patients were graded with an ECOG of 1 (17.8%). Seventy-three patients completed 211 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (1 cycle min. and 3 cycles max.), with a median of 3 cycles. Two patients stopped neoadjuvant chemotherapy and received surgery due to their Grade 3–4 nausea and vomiting after 1 cycle of chemotherapy, 1 patient elected to receive an operation due to PD after 2 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and 3 patients refused to continue chemotherapy and received surgery due to other reasons after 2 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. All of the patients' basic information before chemotherapy is shown in Table 1. The procedure of this study is shown in Figure 1A.
Table 1

Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics

VariableNo. of patients (%)
Age (median year, range)58 (28–75)
Gender
Male54 (73.9)
Female19 (26.0)
Tumour location
Upper body10 (13.6)
Middle body25 (34.2)
Lower body36 (49.3)
Diffuse type2 (2.7)
Tumour differentiation
Well/median differentiated4 (5.4)
Poorly differentiated/mucinous or signet ring cell carcinoma69 (94.5)
Pre-chemotherapy T stage
T29 (12.3)
T342 (57.5)
T422 (30.1)
Pre-chemotherapy N stage
N−22 (30.1)
N+51 (69.9)
Pre-chemotherapy TNM
IB5 (6.8)
II49 (67.1)
III19 (26.0)
Figure 1

Prognostic value of the enroled patients.(A) Flow diagram from chemotherapy to surgery for 73 eligible patients. *Patients with PR, SD or a histological response of Ib-3 according to the JCGC criteria. ** Patients with PD or a histological response of 0–Ia according to JCGC criteria. (B) Distribution of graded histologic regression for patients who underwent radical surgery. (C) Progression-free survival. (D) Overall survival. (E) OS according to ypTNM stage for those who underwent radical surgery. (F) OS according to graded histologic response (⩾50%/<50%).

Among 73 patients, 67 (91.8%) received radical surgery, 4 (5.5%) received palliative surgery due to PD and 2 (2.7%) did not receive surgery due to PD. In patients who received radical surgery, 66 (90.4%) had a D2 lymphadenectomy and 1 (1.4%) received a D1 lymphadenectomy due to a large, chronic gastric ulcer perforation and severe adhesion of the surrounding organs. Sixty-three (94.0%) patients received adjuvant chemotherapy for 354 cycles after radical surgery, with a median of 6 cycles (1 cycle min. and 9 cycles max.). Fifty-four (85.7%) patients received the mFOLFOX6 or XELOX regimen, and 9 (14.3%) received the modified DCF regimen. Table 2 depicts the pathologic characteristics of the resected tumours.
Table 2

Pathologic features of the resected specimens

VariableNo. of patients (n=67) (%)
Tumour differentiation
Well/median differentiated4 (6.0)
Poorly differentiated/mucinous or signet ring cell carcinoma63 (94.0)
Lauren classification
Intestinal23 (34.3)
Diffuse37 (55.2)
Mixed (intestinal+diffuse)7 (10.4)
Local infiltration
Yes4 (6.0)
No63 (94.0)
Neural invasion
Yes0
No67 (100)
Vascular invasion
Yes8 (11.9)
No59 (88.0)
ypT stage
T02 (3.0)
T12 (3.0)
T215 (22.4)
T329 (43.3)
T4a15 (22.4)
T4b4 (6.0)
ypN stage
N031 (46.3)
N19 (13.4)
N29 (13.4)
N3a11 (16.4)
N3b7 (10.4)
ypTNM
02 (3.0)
I9 (13.4)
II30 (44.7)
III26 (38.8)
Pathological evaluation standard of JCGC
G32 (3.0)
G218 (26.9)
G1b23 (34.3)
G1a24 (35.8)
G00
Becker score
⩾90%15 (22.4)
<90%52 (77.6)
Graded histologic response
⩾50%33 (49.2)
<50%34 (50.7)

Abbreviation: JCGC=Japanese classification of Gastric Cancer.

Efficacy

Prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, all the patients were assigned a clinical stage of either T stage- (T2, 12.3% T3/4, 87.7%) or N stage- (N negative, 30.1% N positive, 69.9%) based enhanced CT. One (1.4%) patient did not receive a CT scan due to being lost to follow-up after chemotherapy. On the basis of the CT evaluations, T downstaging occurred in 17 (23.6%) of 72 patients, including 2 T2→T1, 2 T3→T1, 8 T3→T2 and 5 T4→T3, and N downstaging occurred in 12 (16.7% N positive or N+→N negative or N−). Two groups were analysed for survival according to whether there was T or N downstaging, and this analysis showed that neither group was significantly different (P=0.236 for T, P=0.726 for N). According to the JCGC guidelines, there were no cases of CR, 33 cases (45.8%) of PR, 31 (43.0%) cases of SD and 8 (11.1%) cases of PD. Thus, the remission rate (CR+PR) was 45.8% and the disease control rate (CR+PR+SD) was 88.8% the survival difference between the CR+PR group and the SD+PD group was not statistically significant (P=0.438). Among 67 patients who had received radical surgery, 58 (86.6%) were identified as T3/4 by CT staging before chemotherapy and 45 (67.2%) were identified as N+, whereas only 48 (71.6%) were identified pathologically as T3/4 and 36 (53.7%) as N+ after surgery. The tumour stages according to neoadjuvant chemotherapy administration are illustrated in Table 3. Compared with pathological staging and CT staging before chemotherapy, T downstaging occurred in 22 patients (32.8%) and N downstaging occurred in 17 cases (25.4%). Although 32.8% of the patients displayed T downstaging after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the difference did not reach a level of statistical significance between the downstaging and non-downstaging groups (P=0.324), whereas survival analysis showed a significant difference (P=0.017) between the N downstaging group and the non-downstaging group.
Table 3

Tumour stage according to neoadjuvant chemotherapy administration in patients who had received radical surgery

VariableNo. of patients (n=67) (%)
Pre-chemotherapy TNM
T1–2N−5 (7.5)
T1–2N+4 (6.0)
T3–4N−17 (25.4)
T3–4N+41 (61.2)
Post-chemotherapy TNM
T0–N00
T1–2N−10 (14.9)
T1–2N+8 (11.9)
T3–4N−24 (35.8)
T3–4N+25 (37.3)
ypTNM
T0–N02 (3.0)
T1–2N09 (13.4)
T1–2N1–38 (11.9)
T3–4N020 (29.8)
T3–4N1–328 (41.8)
Figure 1B illustrates the distribution of GHR. All of the patients showed different levels of histological regression, in which 2 patients (3.0%) achieved a pathologically complete response (ypT0N0M0), 11 (16.4%) showed a response >90%, 20 cases (29.9%) showed a response ⩾2/3, and 33 cases (49.2%) showed a GHR ⩾50%.

Safety

During neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the most common toxicity was leucopoenia, mainly of Grade 1–2, with Grade 3 occurring in 9 (12.3%) cases, and Grade 4 occurring in 1 (1.4%) case. Grade 3 neutropenia occurred in 4 (5.5%) cases, and Grade 4 neutropenia occurred in 1 (1.4%) case; 13.6% of patients had thrombocytopenia, in which there were 2 (2.7%) cases of Grade 3 and 1 (1.4%) case of Grade 4. The non-haematological toxicity was mild, mainly of Grade 1 or Grade 2, and usually presented as nausea and vomiting, occurring in 49.3% of patients. One (1.4%) case suffered from Grade 3 vomiting, and 1 (1.4%) suffered from Grade 4 vomiting, and both of these patients stopped chemotherapy as a result and received surgery; 1 (1.4%) case suffered from Grade 3 diarrhoea. One (1.4%) case exhibited a Grade 3 ALT elevation and 2 (2.7%) cases suffered from drug fever. Grade 3 to 4 adverse reactions to chemotherapy are indicated in Table 4.
Table 4

Grade 3 to 4 toxicity occurring during preoperative chemotherapy

Grade 3 to 4 toxicityNo. of patients (%)
Leucopoenia10 (13.7)
Neutropenia5 (6.9)
Thrombocytopenia3 (4.1)
Nausea/vomiting2 (2.8)
Diarrhoea1 (1.4)
Elevated ALT1 (1.4)
Fever2 (2.7)

Abbreviation: ALT=alanine aminotransferase.

Among 71 patients who received surgery, 5 (7.0%) cases experienced operative complications. All of the complications were mild, and all of these patients received a D2 lymphadenectomy (Table 5) and recovered without any surgical intervention.
Table 5

Surgical complication in the 71 patients who underwent surgery

VariableNo. of patients (%)
Chylous ascites2 (2.8)
Gastroplegia1 (1.4)
Pancreatic fistula1 (1.4)
Anastomotic bleeding1 (1.4)

Survival analysis

Two (2.7%) of the 73 patients were lost to follow-up. The follow-up time ranged from 5.0 to 93.0 months, with a median of 37.0 months. Thirty-six (49.3%) cases showed disease progression, among which 33 (45.2%) died (as the disease progressed). The median PFS time was 56.0 months (Figure 1.C), and the median OS time was 76.0 months (Figure 1.D); the 1-year survival rate was 84.9%, the 2-year survival rate was 63.0% and the 3-year survival rate was 61.5%. Univariate analysis was performed on 67 patients who received radical surgery regarding the clinicopathologic factors that might influence survival. The results demonstrated that factors such as local invasion, Lauren classification, N staging before chemotherapy and ypTNM staging (Figure 1.E) were correlated with OS. We also examined the association between OS and GHR thresholds of 90%, 66.7%, 60%, 50%, 45%, 40% and 35%, from which it was found that when the thresholds were 50% (Figure 1F) or 66.7%%, the GHR of the primary lesion was correlated with survival. Multivariate analysis was performed by incorporating the factors of sex, age, tumour primary site, Lauren classification, local invasions, pathologic T and N downstaging, GHR of the primary lesion (⩾50%/<50% or ⩾2/3/<2/3), TNM staging before chemotherapy and ypTNM with COX regression, and the results demonstrated that only Lauren classification and ypTNM had a statistically significant association with OS (details in Table 6).
Table 6

Prognostic factors for OS of patients who underwent radical surgery

 Univariate analysis
Multivariate analysis
VariableNo. of patients (n=67) (%)MST (months)P-valueHR95% CIP-value
Gender  0.8070   
 Male49 (73.1)76.0    
 Female18 (26.8) 0.8640.312–2.3950.779
Location  0.1022   
 Upper10 (14.9)76.0    
 Middle22 (32.8)63.5 0.5030.111–2.2890.374
 Lower33 (49.2) 0.4730.114–1.9630.303
 Diffuse2(3.0)13.0 2.7680.387–19.7990.310
Pre-chemotherapy TNM  0.07051.250.468–3.3390.656
 IB5 (7.5)    
 II49 (73.1)    
 III13 (19.4)19.0    
Lauren classification  0.0036   
 Intestinal23 (34.3)    
 Diffuse37 (55.2)38.0 9.9631.937–51.2350.006
 Mixed7 (10.4)22.0 8.8901.157–68.3230.036
Local infiltration  0.0214   
 Yes4 (6.0)16.2    
 No63 (94.0) 0.5840.141–2.4160.458
Pathologic T downstaging  0.3243   
 Yes22 (32.8)    
 No45 (67.2)76.0 1.0880.377–3.1410.876
Pathologic N downstaging  0.0171   
 Yes17 (25.4)    
 No50 (74.6)54.0 6.5320.088–3.2200.492
ypTNM  <0.00014.0451.429–11.4460.008
 0+I11 (16.4)    
 II30 (44.7)    
 III26 (38.8)17.5    
Pathological evaluation standard of JCGC  0.0292   
 G3+G220 (29.9)    
 G1+G047 (70.1)76.0 1.1270.321–3.9550.852
Graded histologic response  0.0364   
 ⩾50%33 (49.2)    
 <50%34 (50.7)31.0 1.3080.430–3.9780.636

Abbreviations: CI=confidence interval; HR=hazard ratio; JCGC=Japanese Gastric Cancer Association; MST=median survival time; OS=overall survival.

Discussion

The treatment of gastric cancer, especially advanced gastric cancer, has always been a challenge for surgeons, oncologists and radiologists. Because there is no standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen, the FOLFOX regimen has been widely used in treating advanced gastric cancer and was adopted in this study. Since 2001, the FOLFOX regimen has become one of the most common treatments for advanced gastric cancer (Louvet ; Kim ; AI-Batran ; Chao ; De Vita ; Hwang ; Keam ). To date, several clinical studies have demonstrated that the FOLFOX regimen, as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen, can improve the effectiveness of locally advanced gastric cancer, with response rates of 50% to 69.7% (Li ; Zhang ). In the current study, one of the primary end points was the response rate. The response rate is mainly evaluated based on radiologic or pathologic criteria. According to rigorous imaging evaluation, no CR cases were found, but 45.8% of patients reached PR after three-cycle chemotherapy on average, with a response rate of 45.8% in this study. Thus, our mFOLFOX6 regimen showed similar efficacy to the reported FOLFOX regimen (Zhang ). Unfortunately, the survival analysis performed by grouping patients into CR+PR or SD+PD was not significantly different, indicating that the impact of the effectiveness of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on prognosis cannot be evaluated by CT imaging only, which was consistent with the conclusion reported by Kurokawa ). Histological response is another important assessment method. The patients who received radical surgery all showed different levels of GHR, with a 3.0% complete regression rate, which was consistent with the 0–15% rate reported by previous prospective studies (Ott ; Cunningham ; Jary ; Wang ; Yoshikawa ); the GHR of 49.2% cases in this study was over 50%, which was higher than 39% reported in the literature (Ferri ), in which 84% were lower oesophageal or gastroesophageal junction cancers, whereas only 13.6% cases in this study were proximal gastric cancer. Gastric cancer in different sites might react differently towards chemotherapy. Two patients who had pCR only had partial clinical responses, showing that CT imaging results did not always agree with histological findings. According to the survival analysis, postoperative pathological factors seemed to be better surrogate end points for OS in studies of neoadjuvant therapy for gastric cancer. Although multivariate analysis did not demonstrate that a GHR ⩾50%/<50% was an independent prognostic factor, univariate analysis revealed that a GHR of 50% between two groups reached statistical significance. It was a practical issue to clarify the GHR threshold that indicated whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy was effective. According to the widely used criteria described by Becker ) and the JCGC, the response rate of cases was lowered, and recent literature also reported that there was no difference in survival rates between the responder and non-responder groups on multivariate analysis (Fujitani ; Schmidt ). When taking 50% as the cut-off value, the 3-year survival rate of patients with a GHR >50% was significantly higher than those with a GHR <50% (69% vs 44%, P=0.01; Mansour ). In the current study, the groups with a GHR ⩾2/3 vs <2/3 and ⩾50% vs <50% all showed a correlation with survival, but the ratio of GHR ⩾2/3 was only 29.9% (the ratio of GHR⩾50% could be seen in our paper). Hence, a GHR ⩾50%/<50% could be applied as the major evaluation criterion for gastric cancer to help formulate a postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy regimen. However, further investigation is necessary to confirm the conclusion that the GHR threshold of 50% can lead to significant survival benefits. In this study, both univariate analysis and multivariate analysis showed that postoperative TNM was the most significant independent prognostic factor, whereas the clinical stage before neoadjuvant chemotherapy was not as reliable as a surrogate marker for OS, which was consistent with the conclusions reported by Schmidt ) and Davies ). Thus, we could infer that patients with a GHR over 50% after neoadjuvant chemotherapy and whose primary tumours were downstaged to a lower TNM stage could be the real beneficiaries and exhibit a longer OS. Of all of the prognostic factors in the univariate analysis, only the Lauren classification maintained statistical significance on multivariate analysis. Due to contradictions with other studies' results (Fujitani ; Schmidt ), this issue is worth further investigation. The R0 resection rate was another end point of this study. Of 73 patients, 91.8% received radical surgery, which was considerably higher than the 69.3% reported by the MAGIC trial using ECF as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen (Cunningham ); the FFCD 9703 trial published in 2011 (Ychou ) also showed the efficacy of cisplatin+5-FU in gastric cancer, but only 84% of patients received radical surgery. Our study showed similar efficacy compared with other clinical trials using FOLFOX as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen, citing a rate between 86% and 92.1% (Li ; Zhang ). Thus, patients with gastric cancer could have a higher R0 resection rate when using FOLFOX as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen. The current study confirmed the high tolerability of the regimen. Similar to other studies in gastric cancer with the FOLFOX regimen (AI-Batran ; De Vita ; Li ; Zhang ), most toxicities were Grade 1 or 2, and only 21.8% of the patients experienced Grade 3 or 4 toxicity, without chemotherapy-associated death or serious complications. Of the 67 patients who received radical surgery, 63 (94.0% accounting for 86.3% of the total inclusive population) continued postoperative chemotherapy, which was slightly higher than the 54.8% in the MAGIC trial (Cunningham ) and 47.8% in the FFCD 9703 trial (Ychou ). D2 gastrectomy has been recommended as a standard practice due to its efficacy and safety, but the safety of D2 resection after chemotherapy has rarely been evaluated, though it is of particular concern for surgeons. Although the MAGIC trial (Cunningham ) and a retrospective analysis from China (Li ) have demonstrated that there was no difference in perioperative morbidity with and without neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the FFCD 9703 trial (Ychou ), 40954 trial (Schuhmacher ) and other non-randomised studies (Fujitani ; An ) demonstrated a trend towards a higher, although non-significant, postoperative morbidity rate in patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. However, the limitation of these trials has been the non-uniform performance of D2 gastrectomy. Due to the conflicting reports, Shrikhande ) prospectively analysed 139 cases who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, in which 126 cases received a D2 gastrectomy. The morbidity in the latter was 12% and the mortality was zero, whereas the morbidity in the control group of those who received upfront surgery was 22.6% without death. Another phase II study with XELOX as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen also showed a low morbidity. In the present study, 66 cases received a D2 gastrectomy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and only 5 cases suffered from complications with an occurrence rate of 7.6% and no surgery-associated death. D2 gastrectomy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy was safe and effective. In conclusion, mFOLFOX6 is a safe, effective and well-tolerated regimen of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for the treatment of locally advanced gastric cancer. The postoperative TNM stage was the most significant independent prognostic factor. We suggest that a GHR ⩾50%/<50% be used as the criterion for evaluating the curative effects of neoadjuvant chemotherapy to guide the selection of postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy regimens. Patients with a GHR ⩾50% may consider continuing their use of the original method of postoperative chemotherapy. However, this was a single-institution study with a small number of cases and without control groups; thus, an appropriately powered randomised trial is necessary before any firm conclusion can be established.
  42 in total

1.  Posttherapy nodal status, not graded histologic response, predicts survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy for advanced gastric cancer.

Authors:  Kazumasa Fujitani; Masayuki Mano; Motohiro Hirao; Yoshinori Kodama; Toshimasa Tsujinaka
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2011-12-21       Impact factor: 5.344

2.  Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy for adenocarcinoma of the pancreas: treatment variables and survival duration.

Authors:  T M Breslin; K R Hess; D B Harbison; M E Jean; K R Cleary; A P Dackiw; R A Wolff; J L Abbruzzese; N A Janjan; C H Crane; J N Vauthey; J E Lee; P W Pisters; D B Evans
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 5.344

3.  Response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy best predicts survival after curative resection of gastric cancer.

Authors:  A M Lowy; P F Mansfield; S D Leach; R Pazdur; P Dumas; J A Ajani
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1999-03       Impact factor: 12.969

4.  Efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with modified FOLFOX7 regimen on the treatment of advanced gastric cancer.

Authors:  Jun Zhang; Ren-Xiong Chen; Jing Zhang; Jun Cai; Hua Meng; Guo-Cong Wu; Zhong-Tao Zhang; Yu Wang; Kang-Li Wang
Journal:  Chin Med J (Engl)       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 2.628

5.  Histomorphology and grading of regression in gastric carcinoma treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  Karen Becker; James D Mueller; Christoph Schulmacher; Katja Ott; Ulrich Fink; Raymonde Busch; Knut Böttcher; J Rüdiger Siewert; Heinz Höfler
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2003-10-01       Impact factor: 6.860

6.  Long-term prognostic significance of extent of rectal cancer response to preoperative radiation and chemotherapy.

Authors:  Leyo Ruo; Satish Tickoo; David S Klimstra; Bruce D Minsky; Leonard Saltz; Madhu Mazumdar; Philip B Paty; W Douglas Wong; Steven M Larson; Alfred M Cohen; Jose G Guillem
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  Phase II study of oxaliplatin in combination with continuous infusion of 5-fluorouracil/leucovorin as first-line chemotherapy in patients with advanced gastric cancer.

Authors:  Wei-Shou Hwang; Tsu-Yi Chao; Shen-Fung Lin; Chih-Yuan Chung; Chang-Fang Chiu; Yi-Fang Chang; Po-Min Chen; Tzeon-Jye Chiou
Journal:  Anticancer Drugs       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 2.248

8.  Tumor stage after neoadjuvant chemotherapy determines survival after surgery for adenocarcinoma of the esophagus and esophagogastric junction.

Authors:  Andrew R Davies; James A Gossage; Janine Zylstra; Fredrik Mattsson; Jesper Lagergren; Nick Maisey; Elizabeth C Smyth; David Cunningham; William H Allum; Robert C Mason
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-09-20       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Phase II study of weekly oxaliplatin and 24-h infusion of high-dose 5-fluorouracil and folinic acid in the treatment of advanced gastric cancer.

Authors:  Y Chao; K H Yeh; C J Chang; L T Chen; T Y Chao; M F Wu; C S Chang; J Y Chang; C Y Chung; W Y Kao; R K Hsieh; A L Cheng
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2004-08-02       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  A phase II trial of Xeloda and oxaliplatin (XELOX) neo-adjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery for advanced gastric cancer patients with para-aortic lymph node metastasis.

Authors:  Yan Wang; Yi-yi Yu; Wei Li; Yi Feng; Jun Hou; Yuan Ji; Yi-hong Sun; Kun-tang Shen; Zhen-bin Shen; Xin-yu Qin; Tian-shu Liu
Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol       Date:  2014-04-21       Impact factor: 3.333

View more
  16 in total

Review 1.  Neoadjuvant chemotherapy in locally advanced colon cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Rathin Gosavi; Clemente Chia; Michael Michael; Alexander G Heriot; Satish K Warrier; Joseph C Kong
Journal:  Int J Colorectal Dis       Date:  2021-05-04       Impact factor: 2.571

Review 2.  Early brain metastasis of advanced gastric cancer with a pathological complete response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery: A case report and literature review.

Authors:  Hui Luo; Liangqun Peng; Nan Wang; Jiangong Zhang; Xiaoli Zheng; Yanan Sun; Chengcheng Fan; Hong Ge
Journal:  Cancer Biol Ther       Date:  2018-04-30       Impact factor: 4.742

3.  Graded histologic response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy is an optimal criterion for treatment change in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer.

Authors:  Xiang Wang; Xiaoyi Li; Na Zhou; Dingrong Zhong; Chunmei Bai; Lin Zhao
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2019-10

4.  A Novel Nomogram for Individually Predicting of Vascular Invasion in Gastric Cancer.

Authors:  Yongsheng Meng; Xiaoliang Huang; Jungang Liu; Jianhong Chen; Zhaoting Bu; Guo Wu; Weishun Xie; Franco Jeen; Lingxu Huang; Chao Tian; Xianwei Mo; Weizhong Tang
Journal:  Technol Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2021 Jan-Dec

5.  Short- and long-term outcomes of laparoscopic versus open gastrectomy for locally advanced gastric cancer following neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  Muneharu Fujisaki; Norio Mitsumori; Toshihiko Shinohara; Naoto Takahashi; Hiroaki Aoki; Yuya Nyumura; Seizo Kitazawa; Katsuhiko Yanaga
Journal:  Surg Endosc       Date:  2020-04-10       Impact factor: 3.453

6.  CapOX as neoadjuvant chemotherapy for locally advanced operable colon cancer patients: a prospective single-arm phase II trial.

Authors:  Fangqi Liu; Li Yang; Yuchen Wu; Cong Li; Jiang Zhao; Adili Keranmu; Hongtu Zheng; Dan Huang; Lei Wang; Tong Tong; Junyan Xu; Ji Zhu; Sanjun Cai; Ye Xu
Journal:  Chin J Cancer Res       Date:  2016-12       Impact factor: 5.087

Review 7.  Is there still a place for conventional histopathology in the age of molecular medicine? Laurén classification, inflammatory infiltration and other current topics in gastric cancer diagnosis and prognosis.

Authors:  Cristina Díaz Del Arco; Luis Ortega Medina; Lourdes Estrada Muñoz; Soledad García Gómez de Las Heras; Mª Jesús Fernández Aceñero
Journal:  Histol Histopathol       Date:  2021-02-10       Impact factor: 2.303

8.  Outcomes of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Clinical Stages 2 and 3 Gastric Cancer Patients: Analysis of Timing and Site of Recurrence.

Authors:  Masaya Nakauchi; Elvira Vos; Laura H Tang; Mithat Gonen; Yelena Y Janjigian; Geoffrey Y Ku; David H Ilson; Steven B Maron; Sam S Yoon; Murray F Brennan; Daniel G Coit; Vivian E Strong
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2021-02-10       Impact factor: 4.339

9.  Patients Administered Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Could be Enrolled into an Enhanced Recovery after Surgery Program for Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer.

Authors:  Jian Zhao; Gang Wang; Zhi-Wei Jiang; Chuan-Wei Jiang; Jiang Liu; Can-Can Xia; Jie-Shou Li
Journal:  Chin Med J (Engl)       Date:  2018-02-20       Impact factor: 2.628

10.  Tumor Regression Grade Predicts Survival in Locally Advanced Gastric Adenocarcinoma Patients with Lymph Node Metastasis.

Authors:  Yilin Tong; Yanmei Zhu; Yan Zhao; Zexing Shan; Jianjun Zhang; Dong Liu
Journal:  Gastroenterol Res Pract       Date:  2020-07-18       Impact factor: 2.260

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.