| Literature DB >> 32595996 |
Daryl K A Chia1, Jimmy B Y So1,2,3.
Abstract
Peritoneal metastasis (PM) frequently occurs in patients with gastric cancer (GC) and confers a dismal prognosis despite advances in systemic chemotherapy. While systemic chemotherapy has poor peritoneal penetration, intraperitoneal (IP) chemotherapy remains sequestered, resulting in high peritoneal drug concentrations with less systemic side-effects. The first application of IP treatment was hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) with cytoreductive surgery (CRS) for gastric cancer peritoneal metastasis (GCPM); but was associated with an increased morbidity and mortality rate without significantly improving overall survival (OS). While CRS confers limited benefit, the potential role of prophylactic HIPEC and laparoscopic neoadjuvant HIPEC are currently being evaluated. Combination systemic and IP chemotherapy (SIPC) gained popularity in the 1990s, since it provided the benefits of IP treatment while reducing surgical morbidity, demonstrating promising early results in multiple Phase II trials. Unfortunately, these findings were not confirmed in the recent PHOENIX-GC randomized controlled trial; therefore, the appropriate treatment for GCPM remains controversial. Small observational studies from Japan and Singapore have reported successful downstaging of PM in GC patients receiving SIPC who subsequently underwent conversion gastrectomy with a median OS of 21.6-34.6 months. Recently, the most significant development in IP-directed therapy is pressurized IP aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC). Given that aerosol chemotherapy achieves a wider distribution and deeper penetration, the outcomes of multiple ongoing trials assessing its efficacy are eagerly awaited. Indeed, IP-directed therapy has evolved rapidly in the last 3 decades, with an encouraging trend toward improved outcomes in GCPM, and may offer some hope for an otherwise fatal disease.Entities:
Keywords: Gastric cancer; HIPEC; Intraperitoneal chemotherapy; PIPAC; Peritoneal metastasis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32595996 PMCID: PMC7311211 DOI: 10.5230/jgc.2020.20.e15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastric Cancer ISSN: 1598-1320 Impact factor: 3.720
Fig. 1Pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC). The abdominal cavity is accessed with 2 balloon trocars allowing hermetic seal. Liquid chemotherapy is dispersed as aerosol using a standard injector and a specific nebulizer (reproduced under the Creative Commons Attribution License, ©2017, Hübner et al. [49]).
CAWS = closed aerosol waste system.
Types and indications of various modalities of IP chemotherapy for gastric cancer
| Types of IP chemotherapy | Indication | Summary | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HIPEC | |||
| HIPEC+CRS | Curative treatment for patients with PM | Radical and invasive procedure with significant morbidity rate. May benefit patients who have limited PM (PCI ≤6) [ | |
| Laparoscopic HIPEC | Palliative treatment for patients with PM | Small number of studies report laparoscopic HIPEC to be relatively safe and having some efficacy in treating PM. Further studies are needed to verify the safety and efficacy of this modality [ | |
| Gastrectomy+HIPEC | Adjuvant treatment for patients at high risk of PM | Evidence suggests that the addition of HIPEC to gastrectomy reduces the risk of peritoneal recurrence, but has significant morbidity rate. Ongoing RCT (GASTRICHIP Trial, | |
| Cather-based chemotherapy | |||
| SIPC | Palliative treatment for patients with PM | Safe procedure which allows for repeated dosing. A number of phase II studies have reported a median overall survival of 21–34 months following conversion gastrectomy in patients with complete resolution of PM. Unfortunately, these findings were not replicated in the only phase III trial to date comparing SIPC with systemic chemotherapy, possibly arising from issues with study methodology [ | |
| EPIC | Adjuvant treatment for patients at high risk of PM | Individual studies demonstrating improvement in overall survival, but with an increased risk of bleeding and intra-abdominal sepsis [ | |
| Emerging modalities | |||
| PIPAC | Palliative treatment for patients with PM | Safe procedure which allows for repeated dosing while preserving quality of life. Growing evidence suggests efficacy for PM, with multiple ongoing trials to verify these findings [ | |
IP = intraperitoneal; HIPEC = hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy; CRS = cytoreductive surgery; EPIC = early postoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy; SIPC = systemic and intraperitoneal chemotherapy; PIPAC = pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy; PM = peritoneal metastasis; PCI = peritoneal carcinomatosis index.