| Literature DB >> 30697609 |
Masaaki Iwatsuki1,2, Kazuto Harada1,2, Shiro Iwagami1, Kojiro Eto1, Takatsugu Ishimoto1, Yoshifumi Baba1, Naoya Yoshida1, Jaffer A Ajani2, Hideo Baba1.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are rare and mesenchymal in origin with a yearly incidence of 10-15 cases per million people. If it is technically resectable, surgical resection is the mainstay of therapy regardless of tumor location,. Although complete (R0) resection can be achieved in up to 85% of patients with primary disease, approximately 50% of patients experience recurrence or metastases within 5 years of primary resection. Moreover, prior to 2000, the prognosis of patients with advanced, inoperable GIST was poor because the molecular mechanism had not sufficiently been elucidated, thus effective therapy was lacking. The tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib, which selectively inhibits tyrosine kinase KIT, has shown substantial clinical benefit for patients with GIST. In clinical trials, imatinib treatment resulted in response rates of 40%-55% and longer progression-free survival for patients with a KIT-positive unresectable or metastatic GIST. Furthermore, recent clinical trials have shown that giving imatinib after curative resection for high-risk cases prolonged recurrence-free survival and overall survival in an adjuvant setting. Several clinical trials of imatinib treatment in a neoadjuvant setting are ongoing; however, in clinical settings, there are problems to resolve, such as optimal agents, duration of administration, and postoperative management. In this review, we discuss the application of surgical options, combined with adjuvant/neoadjuvant or perioperative imatinib treatment and their potential impact on survival for patients with primary, recurrent, or metastatic GIST.Entities:
Keywords: GIST; adjuvant; imatinib; neoadjuvant
Year: 2018 PMID: 30697609 PMCID: PMC6345649 DOI: 10.1002/ags3.12211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Gastroenterol Surg ISSN: 2475-0328
Clinical relevance of neoadjuvant treatment for GIST
| Author | Journal | Year | Cases | Agent/Dose | Patients | Duration |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prospective study | |||||||
| Eisenberg et al | J Surg Oncol | 2009 | 63 | Imatinib/600 mg | GIST ( | 8‐12 wks | 5‐y PFS: 57%, 5‐y OS: 77% |
| Wang et al | Ann Surg Oncol | 2012 | |||||
| Kurokawa et al | Br J Cancer | 2017 | 53 | Imatinib/400 mg | Gastric GIST ( | 6‐9 mo | 2‐y OS: 89% |
| Retrospective study | |||||||
| Rutkowski et al | Ann Surg Oncol | 2012 | 161 | Imatinib/400 mg | Locally advanced GIST | 40 wks | 5‐y DFS: 65%, 5‐y DSS: 95% |
| Tielen et al | Eur J Surg Oncol | 2013 | 57 | Imatinib/400 mg | Locally advanced GIST | 8 mo | 5‐y PFS: 77%, 5‐y OS: 88% |
DSS, disease‐specific survival; GIST, gastrointestinal stromal tumor; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression‐free survival.
Clinical relevance of adjuvant treatment for GIST (prospective trials)
| Phase | Journal | Year | Cases | Agent/Dose | Patients | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prospective study | |||||||
| ACOSOG Z9000 (P‐ II) | Ann Surg | 2013 | 107 | Imatinib/400 mg | High‐risk GIST | 1 y | 5‐y RFS: 40% |
| ACOSOG Z9001 (P‐ III) | J Clin Oncol | 2014 | 713 | Imatinib/400 mg | GIST (≥3 cm, mitosis>5 ≥ 50HPF) | 1 y | 1‐y RFS: 98% (imatinib) vs 83% (placebo) |
| SSGXVIII/AIO (P‐ III) | JAMA | 2012 | 400 | Imatinib/400 mg | High‐risk GIST (>10 cm, high mitosis) | 1 vs 3 y | 5‐y RFS: 66% (3 years) vs 48% (1 y) |
| EORTC 62024 (P‐ III) | J Clin Oncol | 2015 | 908 | Imatinib | Intermediate‐ or high‐risk GIST | 2 y | 5‐y RFS: 69% (imatinib) vs 63% (surgery alone) |
GIST, gastrointestinal stromal tumor; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression‐free survival; RFS, recurrence‐free survival.
Clinical concerns of neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment for GIST
| Clinical concern | Note |
|---|---|
| Neoadjuvant therapy | |
| Agent | Only imatinib evaluated in previous studies. No trials whether sunitinib and regorafenib are effective in the neoadjuvant setting. |
| Optimal duration | At least 3‐6 months prior to surgery may be required, but before secondary resistance (within 2 y). |
| Evaluation of response | PET may give indication of imatinib activity after 2‐4 weeks of therapy for early evaluation of response. |
| Postoperative management | There is no consensus on adjuvant therapy for patients receiving neoadjuvant therapy. It may be desirable because the behavior of the original tumor before treatment may require adjuvant therapy. |
| Adjuvant therapy | |
| Optimal imatinib dose | Only the 400 mg daily dose was given in all previous phase III trials. |
| Optimal duration | At least 3 y of imatinib treatment is recommended for high‐risk GIST patients, but phase II trial of 5‐year dose of adjuvant imatinib was reported. |
| Patient selection | High‐risk patients based on tumor size, mitotic rate, tumor location, and tumor rupture, mutation subtypes should also be considered during patient selection (PDGFRA exon 18 D842V mutation). |
GIST, gastrointestinal stromal tumor; PDGFRA, platelet‐derived growth factor receptor alpha; PET, positron emission tomography.