Literature DB >> 30443292

Integration of stereotactic radiotherapy in the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer patients: a real practice study with long-term outcome and prognostic factors.

Alessandro Ottaiano1, Valerio Scotti2, Chiara De Divitiis3, Monica Capozzi3, Carmen Romano3, Antonino Cassata3, Rossana Casaretti3, Lucrezia Silvestro3, Anna Nappi3, Valeria Vicario3, Alfonso De Stefano3, Salvatore Tafuto3, Massimiliano Berretta4, Guglielmo Nasti1, Antonio Avallone3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There are very few clinical or prognostic studies on the role of SRT (Stereotactic Radiation Therapy) in the continuum of care of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients affected by oligo-mCRC were treated with SRT before or after front-line standard treatments. SRT was delivered according to a risk-adapted protocol. Total body CT (Computed Tomography) scan was done before therapy and every three months thereafter. The radiologic responses to therapy were evaluated by RECIST (Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors). FDG-PET (FluoroDeoxyGlucose - Positron Emission Tomography) was done before and after SRT; metabolic responses were evaluated by using the EORTC (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer) criteria. The Kaplan-Meier product limit method was applied to graph Overall Survival (OS) and Progression-Free Survival (PFS).
RESULTS: Forty-seven patients were included. Twenty-one patients had disease limited to lungs, 9 to lung and liver, 7 only to liver, 10 to multiple sites. The median prescription SRT dose was 60 Gy per organ in 3 fractions (median biological effective dose of 180 Gy). The reduction of delta SUVmax (maximum Standardized Uptake Value) correlated with the local control (p<0.001) and two-years survival (p=0.003). At univariate analysis, localization of primary tumor, site of metastases, KRAS (Kirsten RAt Sarcoma) oncogene mutational status, response to first-line chemotherapy, response to SRT and number of treated lesions predicted both PFS and OS. DISCUSSION: This real practice experience suggests that further studies are needed to analyze the promising role of SRT in the multidisciplinary management of mCRC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  chemotherapy; colorectal cancer; metastatic colorectal cancer; radiation therapy

Year:  2018        PMID: 30443292      PMCID: PMC6219663          DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.25834

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncotarget        ISSN: 1949-2553


INTRODUCTION

Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer worldwide. Despite progresses in the screening allowing for early diagnosis and definitive surgical removing of the localized tumors, about 30% of patients presents with advanced disease involving liver in more than 50% of cases [1]. Other organs frequently targeted by metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) are lungs and lymphnodes. The mainstay of pluri-mCRC treatment is chemotherapy (fluoropyrimidines, irinotecan, oxaliplatin) in association with new biologic drugs (bevacizumab, aflibercept, cetuximab and panitumumab); these drugs have improved survival reaching a median survival of about 30 months in selected patients [2]. In last years, the management of advanced disease has been enriched of integrated strategies including SRT (Stereotactic Radiation Therapy). The administration of SRT demonstrated, particularly in oligo-metastatic disease, to be a safe and effective option [3]. A definition of oligo-metastatic disease is the cancer spreading beyond the primary tumor involving one to three lesions per organ with a cumulative maximum tumor diameter per organ smaller than 7 cm [4]. However, oligo-metastatic disease is a dynamic and biologic state of cancer rather than the simple number and/or volume of the lesions so that its definition is difficult to approach and depends also on the instrumental tools used for detection [5]. Further molecular and biological markers identifying oligo-metastatic disease are urgently needed. Many factors prompt the integration of SRT in the multidisciplinary therapeutic management of mCRC: i) the radiosensitivity of colorectal cancer, ii) the reduced toxicity (sparing of healthy tissue, high and hypofractionated irradiation doses) with the intriguing possibility of concomitant therapies, iii) the potential to induce immune system modulation with regression of tumor deposits in non-irradiated regions (abscopal effect), iv) the increasing availability of the technique. Several studies suggested a significant survival increase versus historical controls in patients bearing lung metastases with two-years survivals ranging from 67.7 % to 77.0% and medians surpassing 30 months [6-8]. The most important prognostic factors were the number and volume of metastatic lesions. However, there are neither prospective nor randomized studies comparing SRT versus standard therapies. Here we report the outcome of 47 patients treated from 2007 to 2012 with SRT for mCRC; the majority of patients had oligo-metastatic disease. In half of the cases the disease involved multiple sites (lungs, liver and/or abdominal lymphnodes).

RESULTS

Patients, disease and treatment characteristics

Patients, diseases and treatment characteristics are shown in Table 1. Median age of patients was 67 years (range: 45-81). Twenty-seven patients were male, 20 female. Most of patients had a PS ECOG 0, 12 PS ECOG 1, 4 PS ECOG 2. The most common primary site was the left colon (15 patients), followed by right colon (10) and sigma (8). Twenty-one patients had disease limited to lungs, 9 to lung and liver, 7 only to liver; ten patients had also metastases to abdominal lymphnodes (>15 mm at TC scan and SUV>3 at PET scan). Twenty-nine tumors had wild-type KRAS, 18 mutated. Twenty-nine patients underwent to front-line SRT; in 18 patients SRT was performed after a first-line chemotherapy. Thirty-five patients were treated with more than one line of SRT [at the same sites (re-irradiation) or at different sites].
Table 1

Characteristics of patients and disease

CharacteristicsNo.
Age, years
 Median67
 Range45-81
Gender
 Male27
 Female20
Performance Status
 031
 112
 24
Site of primary tumor
 Rectum5
 Sigma8
 Left colon15
 Trasversum6
 Right colon10
 Cecum3
Site of metastases
 Only lung21
 Only liver7
 Lung and liver9
 Lung and abdominal lymphnodes7
 Liver and abdominal lymphnodes3
KRAS mutational status
 Wilde-type29
 Mutated18
No. of systemic treatments before first-line SRT
 029
 118
No. of SRT lines
 112
 220
 313
 ≥42

SRT according to metastatic sites

In Table 2 we show the detailed extent of disease per patient at first-line SRT treatment. Most of patients had technically resectable oligo-metastatic disease (29 patients); however, they refused surgery (16 patients, two of them relapsed after previous lung metastasectomies) or had comorbidities (13 patients) (renal failure and/or cardiac diseases and/or hepatic diseases, etc.) contraindicating metastasectomies or aggressive front-line chemotherapies (4 out of these patients did not receive chemotherapy, 2 received capecitabine and bevacizumab at reduced doses, 7 capecitabine and oxaliplatin at reduced doses). The SRT treatment was well tolerated; only three patients experienced persistent cough for 20 to 40 days after the last irradiation.
Table 2

Distribution of metastatic lesions and reasons for performing SRT treatment

Patient identification numberOligometastatic disease ab initioReasons for first-line SRTDistribution of lesions at first SRTTotal number of lesions
1NoNA3 lung, 2 liver5
2YesRefusal of metastasectomies3 lung3
3YesRefusal of metastasectomies1 lung, 2 liverB3
4YesComorbidities3 lung, 2 abdominal LN5
5YesRefusal of metastasectomies2 liver2
6NoNA2 lung2
7NoNA4 lung4
8YesRefusal of metastasectomies2 lung2
9YesRefusal of metastasectomies3 liver3
10NoNA2 lung, 2 liver4
11YesRefusal of metastasectomies3 lung3
12NoNA3 lung, 2 abdominal LN5
13YesComorbidities6 lung6
14YesRefusal of metastasectomies2 lung, 1 abdominal LN3
15NoNA2 liver, 2 abdominal LN4
16YesRefusal of metastasectomies3 liverB3
17YesRefusal of metastasectomies1 lung1
18NoNA2 lung2
19YesComorbidities3 liver, 2 abdominal LN5
20YesComorbidities4 liverB4
21YesRefusal of metastasectomies2 lung2
22NoNA3 lung, 1 abdominal LN4
23NoNA5 lung5
24NoNA4 lung4
25YesComorbidities2 lung, 1 abdominal LN3
26YesComorbidities3 liver, 2 abdominal LN5
27YesRefusal of metastasectomies2 lung2
28NoNA4 lung, 3 liver7
29YesComorbidities2 lung, 1 liver3
30YesRefusal of metastasectomies3 liverB3
31YesComorbidities5 liver5
32YesComorbidities4 lung, 2 liver6
33NoNA3 lung3
34YesRefusal of metastasectomies1 lung, 1 liver2
35YesComorbidities6 lung6
36YesRefusal of metastasectomies3 lung3
37NoNA2 lung2
38NoNA5 lung, 2 abdominal LNB7
39YesRefusal of metastasectomies2 lung2
40YesComorbidities3 lung, 1 abdominal LN4
41NoNA5 lung5
42YesRefusal of metastasectomies1 lung1
43YesComorbidities3 lung, 3 liver6
44NoNA3 lung3
45NoNA2 lung2
46YesComorbidities3 liverB3
47NoNA4 lung, 3 liver7

NA: Not Applicable, in these cases SRT was performed after chemotherapy for poly-metastatic disease on “residual” masses.

BThese patients experienced progressive disease at first-line chemotherapy.

NA: Not Applicable, in these cases SRT was performed after chemotherapy for poly-metastatic disease on “residual” masses. BThese patients experienced progressive disease at first-line chemotherapy.

Systemic treatments and toxicities

Treatments are depicted in details in Table 3. Forty-three patients received a first-line chemotherapy; the most common schedule was the association between fluoropyrimidines (capecitabine or fluorouracil), oxaliplatin and bevacizumab (Capox or Folfox plus Bevacizumab). Median duration of treatments was 7.3 months. Four patient did not undergo to chemotherapy because of comorbidities and age. The use of fluoropyrimidines, irinotecan and anti-EGFR (cetuximab or panitumumab) was predominant in second-line therapies. Monotherapies with anti-EGFR agents and fluoropyrimidines and mitomycin-c association were more frequent in third-line treatments. Twenty-one patients were re-treated with previous therapies (if the progression-free interval was more than 6 months and there were not previous grade 3/4 toxic events). There were no grade 4 toxicities or toxic deaths. The most common G3 adverse events were diarrhea (13/47 patients), neutropenia (11/47 patients) and cutaneous rush (6/47).
Table 3

Chemotherapeutic regimens

First-line schedulesNo. of patients
 Folfox or Capox9
 Folfox or Capox + Bevacizumab23
 Folfiri or CapIri1
 Folfiri or CapIri + Bevacizumab2
 Folfiri or CapIri + anti-EGFR6
 Irinotecan + anti-EGFR0
 Fluoropyrimidines monotherapy0
 Fluoropyrimidines + Bevacizumab2
 Anti-EGFR monotherapy0
 Fluoropyrimidines + Mytomicin-C0
Second-line schedules
 Folfox or Capox7
 Folfox or Capox + Bevacizumab0
 Folfiri or CapIri8
 Folfiri or CapIri + Bevacizumab2
 Folfiri or CapIri + anti-EGFR15
 Irinotecan + anti-EGFR4
 Fluoropyrimidines monotherapy3
 Fluoropyrimidines + Bevacizumab0
 Anti-EGFR monotherapy1
 Fluoropyrimidines + Mytomicin-C0
Third line schedules
 Folfox or Capox1
 Folfox or Capox + Bevacizumab0
 Folfiri or CapIri3
 Folfiri or CapIri + Bevacizumab0
 Folfiri or CapIri + anti-EGFR0
 Irinotecan + anti-EGFR3
 Fluoropyrimidines monotherapy4
 Fluoropyrimidines + Bevacizumab0
 Anti-EGFR monotherapy6
 Fluoropyrimidines + Mytomicin-C9
Re-challenges at any lines of therapy21

Associations between SRT and clinical variables

In our series, all patients performed FDG-PET before and after the first administration of SRT. Figure 1 shows FDG-PET results of SRT in three patients. The median prescription dose was 60 Gy per organ in 3 fractions (median biological effective dose of 180 Gy). The reduction of deltaSUVmax correlated with the local control of disease (time-to-progression after SRT at the irradiated sites, p<0.001) and survival at two years (p=0.003). Interestingly, although not significant (p=0.0512) for the low numbers included, patients who received a first-line chemotherapy including bevacizumab (anti-VEGF) before SRT were more prone to respond to SRT compared to patients treated with chemotherapy only. There were no significant correlations between delta SUVmax (maximum Standardized Uptake Value)and timing of chemotherapy (before or after SRT), response to first-line treatment, and sites of disease (Table 4). Given the importance of the metastatic site in the decision-making and planning of SRT, with an exploratory and descriptive aim, potential correlations between sites of disease and FDG-PET responses after SRT were studied (Table 5a and 5b). The patients were divided into two groups: i) upfront SRT vs ii) SRT after front-line chemotherapy. In fact, in the second group, responses to SRT could be influenced by the previous exposition of neoplastic cells to chemotherapy. There were no significant differences in terms of FDG-PET responses to SRT between different sites into the two groups; however, most of CMR and PMR according to EORTC criteria were observed in lung-limited disease patients
Figure 1

FDG-PET scans showing FDG uptakes before (A1, B1 and C1) and after SRT (A2, B2 and C2) in lungs (A1 vs A2) and liver metastases (B1 vs B2; C1 vs C2) of three patients (panels A, B, C).

Table 4

Correlations between ΔSUVmax and clinical variables

No. of patientsDSUVmax median of the treated lesions (standard deviation)P
Local control (months)A
 <61042 (28)
 6-121262 (18)
 >122578 (23)<0.001
Chemotherapy before SRT
 No2964 (16)
 Yes1868 (22)0.293
Response to first-line chemotherapy
 RC, RP, SD3769 (26)
 PD662 (19)0.348
Anti-VEGF therapy before SRT
 Yes1173 (15)
 No556 (20)0.0512
Overall survival
 ≤2 years946 (17)
 >2 years3875 (22)0.003
Sites of disease
 Lung2167 (16)
 Liver758 (28)
 Lung and liver971 (15)
 Presence of LN metastases1077 (20)0.091
KRAS mutational status
 Wilde Type2969 (14)
 Mutated1861 (19)0.462

A: from the date of the first SRT application to the evidence of progression of the irradiate site.

Table 5a

FDG-PET responses in patients receiving upfront SRT (29 patients)

FDG-PET response
CMRPMRSMDPMD
Sites of disease
 Lung111721
 Liver72401
 Lung and liver50212
 Presence of LN metastases61121
Table 5b

FDG-PET responses in patients receiving SRT after first-line line chemotherapy (18 patients)

FDG-PET response
CMRPMRSMDPMD
Sites of disease
 Lung102620
 Liver00000
 Lung and liver40211
 Presence of LN metastases40202

CMR: complete metabolic response; PMR: partial metabolic response; SMD: stable metabolic disease; PMD: progressive metabolic disease.

*All PMDs were attributable to new lesions distant form the irradiated sites.

FDG-PET scans showing FDG uptakes before (A1, B1 and C1) and after SRT (A2, B2 and C2) in lungs (A1 vs A2) and liver metastases (B1 vs B2; C1 vs C2) of three patients (panels A, B, C). A: from the date of the first SRT application to the evidence of progression of the irradiate site. CMR: complete metabolic response; PMR: partial metabolic response; SMD: stable metabolic disease; PMD: progressive metabolic disease. *All PMDs were attributable to new lesions distant form the irradiated sites.

Clinical and pathological prognostic factors in patients treated with SRT

One of the most important characteristic of our series is the mature follow-up (median follow-up: 48.8 months); forty-five events were registered, only two patients are still alive at the time of last follow-up (May, 16 2017). The median PFS of the entire series was 16 months; median OS 44.0 months. Figure 2 and 3 show Kaplan-Meyer PFS and OS curves according to response to systemic therapy or SRT and extent of the disease. At univariate analysis, localization of primary tumor, site of metastases, KRAS mutational status, response to first-line chemotherapy, response to upfront SRT evaluated with FDG-PET and number of treated lesions had a positive prognostic power (Table 6 and 7).
Figure 2

Kaplan-Meyer progression-free survival curves according to response to therapies (A: SRT; B: chemotherapy), and extent of disease (C: type of involved organ; D: total number of metastases). See Table 6 for P at log-rank test.

Figure 3

Kaplan-Meyer survival curves according to response to therapies (A: SRT; B: chemotherapy), and extent of disease (C: type of involved organ; D: total number of metastases). See Table 7 for P at log-rank test.

Table 6

Univariate analysis of progression-free survival according to specific clinical, molecular and anatomical variables

VariableEvents/PatientsMedian PFS1 (months)HR295% CI3P at univariate
Age (≤70 vs >70 years)15/16 vs 31/3116 vs 161.290.71-2.340.37
Gender (male vs female)26/27 vs 20/2014 vs 200.860.48-1.530.57
Localization of primary tumor (right vs left colon)24/24 vs 22/2313 vs 191.700.94-3.090.0445
Site of metastases (only lung vs only liver vs multiple sites)20/21 vs 6/6 vs 20/2021 vs 13 vs 120.360.18-0.730.0014
KRAS mutational status (mutated vs wild-type)18/18 vs 28/2912 vs 182.021.02-3.970.0093
Response to first-line chemotherapy (RC/RP vs SD/ PD)25/26 vs 21/2121 vs 130.350.18-0.69<0.0001
Response to first-line SRT (CMR/PMR vs SMD/PMD)20/20 vs 11/1120 vs 130.430.17-1.050.0199
Number of lesions (1-3 vs 4-5 vs 6-7)24/25 vs 15/15 vs 7/719 vs 16 vs 60.140.02-0.85<0.0001

PFS1= Progression-Free Survival; HR2 = Hazard Ratio; CI3 = Confidence Intervals.

Table 7

Univariate analysis of overall survival according to specific clinical, molecular and anatomical variables

VariableEvents/PatientsMedian OS1 (months)HR295% CI3P at univariate
Age (≤70 vs >70 years)14/16 vs 31/3141.5 vs 461.280.69-2.350.42
Gender (male vs female)25/27 vs 20/2044 vs 450.970.54-1.750.92
Localization of primary tumor (right vs left colon)19/19 vs 26/2838 vs 602.031.11-4.680.0008
Site of metastases (only lung vs only liver vs multiple sites)19/21 vs 6/6 vs 20/2065 vs 45 vs 330.280.15-0.55<0.0001
KRAS mutational status (mutated vs wild-type)18/18 vs 27/2934 vs 552.471.21-5.050.0012
Response to first-line chemotherapy (RC/RP vs SD/ PD)24/26 vs 21/2163 vs 330.230.10-0.49<0.0001
Response to first-line SRT (CMR/PMR vs SMD/PMD)19/20 vs 11/1165 vs 350.220.07-0.69<0.0001
Number of lesions (1-3 vs 4-5 vs 6-7)23/25 vs 15/15 vs 7/761 vs 43 vs 120.230.02-0.77<0.0001

OS1= Overall Survival; HR2 = Hazard Ratio; CI3 = Confidence Intervals.

Kaplan-Meyer progression-free survival curves according to response to therapies (A: SRT; B: chemotherapy), and extent of disease (C: type of involved organ; D: total number of metastases). See Table 6 for P at log-rank test. Kaplan-Meyer survival curves according to response to therapies (A: SRT; B: chemotherapy), and extent of disease (C: type of involved organ; D: total number of metastases). See Table 7 for P at log-rank test. PFS1= Progression-Free Survival; HR2 = Hazard Ratio; CI3 = Confidence Intervals. OS1= Overall Survival; HR2 = Hazard Ratio; CI3 = Confidence Intervals.

DISCUSSION

Patients with mCRC may present with an oligo-metastatic disease with neoplastic lesions approachable with local treatments. In last years, many studies have been published reporting results of SRT in the treatment of oligo-mCRC [9-23]. They were heterogeneous in terms of number of treated patients (from 13 [17] to 82 [20]) and median overall survivals (from 16.0 months [10] to 46.0 [21]). Median follow-up was often inferior to 35 months with the longest one reported by Agolli et al. of 36 months [15]. In our study we show the outcome as well as the prognostic factors of 47 consecutive patients affected by oligo-mCRC treated with first or subsequent lines of SRT from 2007 to 2012. Notably, most of patients had a local control >12 months, which is similar to previous experiences. Furthermore, the median overall survival in our series, including patients with both lung and liver involvement (9 patients) or diffusion to abdominal lymphnodes (10 patients) of 44.0 months, was particularly positive considering that the best survival previously reached with SRT (46.0 months) was reported in patients with only lung metastases [21]. Interestingly, the five-year survival of patients with lung-limited disease was 39%, this data compares well with historical surgical controls [21-24] considering also that 12 patients had ≥3 lesions and that some patients received a “depotentiated” chemotherapy course because of comorbidities or age. The more positive outcome of our study could be attributable to the introduction of new therapies (anti-VEGF, anti-EGFR agents) in the context of a continuum of care strategy. However, many patients had comorbidities excluding the administration of standard or continuous chemotherapies. A possible speculative explanation of significantly better results can rely also on different lines of SRT (re-irradiations) reinforcing the abscopal effect of radiotherapy which consists on the local induction of tumor antigens and the release of cytokines stimulating in turn the innate and adaptive immunity [25]. However, this is a perspective to verify because in the present study, no immunologic evaluations were done. In future studies, prospective evaluations of immune-regulatory cells (Tregs [regulatory T cells], MDSC [myeloid-derived suppressor cells]) [26], effector cells (NK [Natural Killer] and T lymphocytes) [27], cytokines [28] and correlations with immunescores [29, 30] (on primary and/or metastatic lesions) will be necessary to clarify the immunologic mechanisms eventually underling the clinical outcomes. However, to this regard, many clinical and translational trials in advanced lung, melanoma and mCRC are now recruiting patients through protocols based on SRT and immunotherapies with different mechanisms of action (pembrolizumab, durvalumab, tremelimumab, dabrafenib, trametinib, MK-3475, etc.) (https://clinicaltrials.gov/). The intent of these studies is to take advantage from the immune-modulating properties of SRT in synergism with immunotherapeutic drugs to improve the anti-tumor effects. Interestingly, some patients presented with poly-metastatic multi-organs disease and received a standard first-line chemotherapy as front-line therapy; in these cases, SRT was administered in “residual” disease. These patients are more similar to mCRC patients with more aggressive and widely metastatic tumors. They did not receive systemic therapy after SRT until progression. The univariate analysis showed a worse prognosis compared to patients with only lung or liver involvement; however, they had a median survival of 34 months which is superior to the survival described in last generation randomized trials [31, 32]. Lacking specific studies (ideally, chemotherapy plus SRT vs chemotherapy), this is an indirect evidence that the integration of SRT in advanced disease could ameliorate the anti-neoplastic effect of chemotherapy and contribute to the control of systemic disease. The neoplastic lesions responded to SRT independently from i) the primary or metastatic site, ii) the administration of upfront chemotherapy, iii) chemosensitivity of the tumor (evaluated as response to a first-line chemotherapy). Interestingly, the administration of bevacizumab before irradiation was slightly associated with the metabolic response (p=0.0512). Although not significant, this could be related to the effect of bevacizumab on tumor vasculature with reduction in microvessel density producing an increase of tumor oxygenation and perfusion; these phenomena are associated with increased sensitivity to radiation therapy in tumor models [33, 34]. KRAS mutational status was not associated with response to SRT, but predicted PFS and OS at univariate analysis. The best prognostic profile in this study was represented by left sided, KRAS wild-type, lung-limited tumor. The presence of these three conditions were strongly associated with survival compared to other prognostic combinations (+33.5 months; 75.5 vs 42 months; HR: 0,30; 95% CI: 0.16-0.56; p=0.0021 at log-rank test) and with response to SRT and chemotherapy (data not shown). One of the major limitation of our study consists on the heterogeneity of patient cohort with regard to systemic treatment protocols, radiotherapy regimens (doses and timing with chemotherapy) and Kras status that, in absence of a comparator (no SRT), makes interpretation of the findings as predominantly descriptive and exploratory. However, the increasing availability of SRT along with the shorter treatment duration, the high precision and the high sparing of surrounding normal tissues, make this technique a valid option in the treatment of oligo-mCRC; in left-sided, KRAS wild-type, lung-limited tumors it could be a valid alternative to surgery. Furthermore, our experience suggests that SRT could contribute to obtain a long-term disease control also when multiple organs are involved; prospective and larger studies are needed to confirm these data.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Patient management and follow-up

Patients were treated at the Department of Abdominal Medical Oncology of the National Cancer Institute (Naples, Italy) from 2007 to 2012. Only two patients of the present cohort did not undergo to primary tumor resection because it was asymptomatic. All primary tumors were routinely characterized for KRAS (Kirsten RAt Sarcoma) oncogene mutational status. Six patients were stage III at diagnosis but they presented distant metastases three months after surgery at the first follow-up (synchronous metastases). Sequential standard treatments with chemotherapy (fluorouracil/capecitabine, irinotecan, oxaliplatin) and/or biologic therapies (bevacizumab, cetuximab, panitumumab) were administered. The choice of chemotherapy regimen was based on patient's performance status, extent of disease, comorbidities, previous treatments and individual preferences. Informed consent from each patient was sought. Total body computed tomography (CT) scan and CEA (CarcinoEmbryonic Antigen) monitoring were done every three months. The response to therapy was evaluated by RECIST (Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors). Patients with target metastatic lesions restaged at the Radiology Unit were considered for response evaluation. Complete response (CR) was defined as complete disappearance of all detectable evidence of disease on total body computed tomography. Partial response (PR) was defined as at least a 30% decrease in the sum of diameters of target lesions. Stable disease (SD) was defined as everything between 30% decrease and 20% growth of tumor size. Progressive disease (PD) was defined as at least a 20% increase in the sum of diameters of target lesions. Toxicity was graded with the Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) v3.0. Local control was defined from last day of SRT to local relapse within the irradiated site. RECIST was only used to assess response to chemotherapy. FDG-PET (FluoroDeoxyGlucose-Positron Emission Tomography) responses were evaluated by using the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) criteria [35, 36]. In brief, definitions of metabolic response by FDG-PET/CT included: complete metabolic response (CMR: complete resolution of all metabolically active target and non-target lesions, and no new lesions); partial metabolic response (PMR: 20% or greater decrease in SUV of target lesions with or without decrease in number/size of nontarget lesions, and no new lesions); progressive metabolic disease (PMD: one or more new lesions, 20% or greater increase in SUV of target lesions and/or unequivocal increase in FDG activity of nontarget lesions); and stable metabolic disease (SMD: not qualifying as CMR, PMR, or PMD). FDG PET responses were also evaluated with the Response Index (RI). The measurements of SUV (Standardized Uptake Value) obtained in the metastatic lesions at baseline (SUV1) and after 60 days from SRT treatment (SUV2) were compared and the change was expressed as the percentage of SUV reduction (ΔSUV = (SUV1−SUV2)/SUV1×100).

SRT indications

Our policy was to propose SRT in patients with one to six lesions in the lungs, one to three lesions into the liver, with a cumulative maximum tumor diameter per organ smaller than 7 cm or in patients who refused surgery or had comorbidities contraindicating surgery or chemotherapy. The presence of metastatic abdominal lymphnodes (until 3) did not excluded SRT. However, the indication to perform SRT was discussed in a multidisciplinary context. Notably, in few cases the transition from poly- to oligo-metastatic disease was obtained after chemotherapy; these patients were re-evaluated for SRT.

SRT protocol

SRT was delivered according to a risk-adapted protocol; doses and fractionations were based on the size and location of the tumor (54 Gy/3 fractions, 55 Gy/5 fractions or 60 Gy/8 fractions). Treatment was delivered on alternate days regardless of the dose-fractionation regimen. A 4-D CT simulation scan was acquired for all patients. Respiratory gating was considered in cases where motion was > 7 mm in any direction. The gross tumor volume (GTV) was defined as the visible tumor on CT and PET imaging, and an internal GTV encompassed the GTV from all phases of respiration. A planning target volume (PTV) margin of 5 mm was used. The prescription point was approximately the 80% isodose line surrounding the PTV, with the requirement that 95% of the PTV was covered by 100% of the prescription dose. FDG-PET was performed before SRT and after 60 days from the treatment end.

Statistical analyses and data presentation

Results of this study are predominantly descriptive and exploratory. Associations between responses to chemotherapy, SRT and clinical and pathologic variables (age, gender, oligo-metastatic disease, KRAS status, sites of disease) were evaluated by χ 2 test. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Progression-free survival (PFS) was defined as the time elapsed from front-line treatment start to progression of the cancer as it occurred first; overall survival (OS) was defined as the time elapsed from the diagnosis to death from any cause. The Kaplan-Meier product limit method was applied to graph OS and PFS. Survival was measured from diagnosis in order to avoid generation of prognostic subgroups related to different treatments start times. Univariate analysis was done with the log-rank test. No attempt was done to perform multivariate analysis because of small number of cases. Statistical analysis was performed using the MedCalc® 9.3.7.0 and Excel software.
  36 in total

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Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 2.895

Review 3.  Anticancer properties of the IL-12 family--focus on colorectal cancer.

Authors:  M A Engel; M F Neurath
Journal:  Curr Med Chem       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 4.530

4.  FOLFIRI plus cetuximab versus FOLFIRI plus bevacizumab as first-line treatment for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (FIRE-3): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Volker Heinemann; Ludwig Fischer von Weikersthal; Thomas Decker; Alexander Kiani; Ursula Vehling-Kaiser; Salah-Eddin Al-Batran; Tobias Heintges; Christian Lerchenmüller; Christoph Kahl; Gernot Seipelt; Frank Kullmann; Martina Stauch; Werner Scheithauer; Jörg Hielscher; Michael Scholz; Sebastian Müller; Hartmut Link; Norbert Niederle; Andreas Rost; Heinz-Gert Höffkes; Markus Moehler; Reinhard U Lindig; Dominik P Modest; Lisa Rossius; Thomas Kirchner; Andreas Jung; Sebastian Stintzing
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2014-07-31       Impact factor: 41.316

5.  Radiosensitivity of Colon and Rectal Lung Oligometastasis Treated With Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy.

Authors:  Rémy Kinj; Pierre-Yves Bondiau; Eric François; Jean-Pierre Gérard; Arash O Naghavi; Axel Leysalle; Emmanuel Chamorey; Ludovic Evesque; Bernard Padovani; Antoine Ianessi; Karen Benezery; Jérôme Doyen
Journal:  Clin Colorectal Cancer       Date:  2016-08-31       Impact factor: 4.481

6.  FOLFOXIRI plus bevacizumab versus FOLFIRI plus bevacizumab as first-line treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer: updated overall survival and molecular subgroup analyses of the open-label, phase 3 TRIBE study.

Authors:  Chiara Cremolini; Fotios Loupakis; Carlotta Antoniotti; Cristiana Lupi; Elisa Sensi; Sara Lonardi; Silvia Mezi; Gianluca Tomasello; Monica Ronzoni; Alberto Zaniboni; Giuseppe Tonini; Chiara Carlomagno; Giacomo Allegrini; Silvana Chiara; Mauro D'Amico; Cristina Granetto; Marina Cazzaniga; Luca Boni; Gabriella Fontanini; Alfredo Falcone
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2015-08-31       Impact factor: 41.316

7.  Final results of a phase II trial for stereotactic body radiation therapy for patients with inoperable liver metastases from colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Marta Scorsetti; Tiziana Comito; Angelo Tozzi; Pierina Navarria; Antonella Fogliata; Elena Clerici; Pietro Mancosu; Giacomo Reggiori; Lorenza Rimassa; Guido Torzilli; Stefano Tomatis; Armando Santoro; Luca Cozzi
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-09-23       Impact factor: 4.553

8.  Multi-institutional phase I/II trial of stereotactic body radiation therapy for lung metastases.

Authors:  Kyle E Rusthoven; Brian D Kavanagh; Stuart H Burri; Changhu Chen; Higinia Cardenes; Mark A Chidel; Thomas J Pugh; Madeleine Kane; Laurie E Gaspar; Tracey E Schefter
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-03-02       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Stereotactic body radiotherapy for patients with oligometastases from colorectal cancer: risk-adapted dose prescription with a maximum dose of 83-100 Gy in five fractions.

Authors:  Atsuya Takeda; Naoko Sanuki; Yuichiro Tsurugai; Yohei Oku; Yousuke Aoki
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 2.724

10.  Clinical efficacy of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy for lung metastases arising from colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Jinhong Jung; Si Yeol Song; Jong Hoon Kim; Chang Sik Yu; Jin Cheon Kim; Tae Won Kim; Seong-Yun Jeong; Su Ssan Kim; Eun Kyung Choi
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2015-11-21       Impact factor: 3.481

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  1 in total

Review 1.  Tumour Burden Reporting in Phase III Clinical Trials of Metastatic Lung, Breast, and Colorectal Cancers: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Mariachiara Santorsola; Vincenzo Di Lauro; Guglielmo Nasti; Michele Caraglia; Maurizio Capuozzo; Francesco Perri; Marco Cascella; Gabriella Misso; Alessandro Ottaiano
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-03       Impact factor: 6.575

  1 in total

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