| Literature DB >> 32641867 |
Christopher M Jones1,2,3, Ganesh Radhakrishna4, Katharine Aitken5,6, John Bridgewater7, Pippa Corrie8, Martin Eatock9, Rebecca Goody2,3, Paula Ghaneh10, James Good11, Derek Grose12, Daniel Holyoake13, Arabella Hunt5,6, Nigel B Jamieson14, Daniel H Palmer15,16, Zahir Soonawalla17, Juan W Valle4,18, Maria A Hawkins19, Somnath Mukherjee20.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic epicentre has moved to the USA and Europe, where it is placing unprecedented demands on healthcare resources and staff availability. These service constraints, coupled with concerns relating to an increased incidence and severity of COVID-19 among patients with cancer, should lead to re-consideration of the risk-benefit balance for standard treatment pathways. This is of particular importance to pancreatic cancer, given that standard diagnostic modalities such as endoscopy may be restricted, and that disease biology precludes significant delays in treatment. In light of this, we sought consensus from UK clinicians with an interest in pancreatic cancer for management approaches that would minimise patient risk and accommodate for healthcare service restrictions. The outcomes are described here and include recommendations for treatment prioritisation, strategies to bridge to later surgical resection in resectable disease and factors that modify the risk-benefit balance for treatment in the resectable through to the metastatic settings. Priority is given to strategies that limit hospital visits, including through the use of hypofractionated precision radiotherapy and chemoradiotherapy treatment approaches.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32641867 PMCID: PMC7341025 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-020-0980-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Suggested approaches for and key points relating to the management of patients with pancreatic cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic.
| General principles |
• The risks conferred by COVID-19 are greater for older patients and those with comorbidities. • Minimise hospital visits, including through use of telephone consultations. • Educate patients regarding the importance of physical distancing measures. • Use hypofractionated regimes where radiotherapy is to be delivered. • Dose modification and the use of prophylactic growth factor and antibiotics may mitigate SACT risks. • Treatment decisions should be individualised, taking into account patient choice, followed by counselling of its risks and benefits. |
| Resectable and borderline resectable disease |
Upfront treatment options • Options for upfront resection are likely to be limited due to a lack of capacity and resources. • Where surgery is unavailable, consider upfront SACT or hypofractionated precision RT/CRT. • Where SACT can be used, FOLFIRINOX is preferred and may allow deferral of resection. • For RT, consider 25–35 Gy/5# RT alone or 36–45 Gy/15# CRT with concurrent capecitabine. Adjuvant SACT • Without adjuvant SACT, survival following resection is <10%. • Decisions to give adjuvant treatment are likely to be nuanced and based on a risk–benefit analysis. • Treatment may be deferred by up to 12 weeks following surgery. • The increased effectiveness of combination SACT should be weighed against the increased complications risk. |
| Locally advanced pancreatic cancer |
• For fit patients without significant comorbidities, consider four cycles of modified FOLFORINOX ± consolidation hypofractionated RT/CRT. • The risks of treatment in those aged over 80 years are likely to outweigh any benefit. • For all other patients, consider upfront hypofractionated RT/CRT, with the aim of deferring SACT. |
| Metastatic disease |
First-line treatment • Risks of treatment are likely to outweigh benefits for most patients. • Decisions to treat should be individualised and highly selective. • SACT options include gemcitabine, gemcitabine plus • Consider early response assessment and limiting duration of SACT where possible. Second-line treatment • Risks of treatment outweigh potential benefits and treatment should not be routinely offered to patients. |
# fractions, COVID-19 coronavirus disease 2019, CRT chemoradiotherapy, FOLFIRINOX 5-fluorouracil, folinic acid, irinotecan and oxaliplatin, RT radiotherapy, SACT systemic anticancer therapy.
Key technical details for the outlined precision hypofractionated radiotherapy approaches.
| Regimen | Aspect | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| 25–35 Gy/5# RT alone | Indication | • Locally advanced unresectable, or borderline resectable, disease • Recurrent disease • Where patient is unsuitable for surgery |
| Investigations | • MRI may be required to aid tumour definition | |
| Dose to PTV | • 30–35 Gy/5# daily or on alternate days • If no 4D CT, use dose prescription of 25 Gy/5# | |
| Planning | • IMRT or VMAT | |
| 36–45 Gy/15# CRT with concurrent capecitabine | Indication | • Locally advanced disease • Borderline resectable disease |
| Investigations | • MRI may be required to aid tumour definition | |
| Dose to PTV | • Borderline resectable disease: 36 Gy/15# over 3 weeks • Locally advanced disease: 45 Gy/15# over 3 weeks | |
| Chemotherapy | • Capecitabine 830 mg/m2 twice daily on days of radiotherapy | |
| Planning | • IMRT or VMAT |
CT computed tomography, IMRT intensity-modulated radiation therapy, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, PTV planning target volume, RT radiotherapy, VMAT volumetric modulated arc therapy.