| Literature DB >> 35715637 |
Petr Szturz1, Jan B Vermorken2,3.
Abstract
Allowing selected patients with few distant metastases to undergo potentially curative local ablation, the designation "oligometastatic" has become a widely popular concept in oncology. However, accumulating evidence suggests that many of these patients harbour an unrecognised microscopic disease, leading either to the continuous development of new metastases or to an overt polymetastatic state and questioning thus an indiscriminate use of potentially harmful local ablation. In this paper, reviewing data on oligometastatic disease, we advocate the importance of identifying a true oligometastatic disease, characterised by a slow speed of development, instead of relying solely on a low number of lesions as the term "oligometastatic" implies. This is particularly relevant in clinical practice, where terminology has been shown to influence decision making. To define a true oligometastatic disease in the context of its still elusive biology and interaction with the immune system, we propose using clinical criteria. As discussed further in the paper, these criteria can be classified into three categories involving a low probability of occult metastases, low tumour growth rate and low tumour burden. Such cases with slow tumour-cell shedding and slow proliferation leave a sufficiently broad window-of-opportunity to detect and treat accessible lesions, increasing thus the odds of a cure.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35715637 PMCID: PMC9381792 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-022-01879-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 9.075
Clinical characteristics of a true oligometastatic disease (“argometastases”).
| Metachronous presentation with a long disease-free intervala |
| Controlled primary tumour |
| No suspicious micronodules of unknown originb |
| No regional lymph nodes involvement at initial diagnosis |
| Favourable distant organ site involvementc |
| Possibility to lower the detection threshold by auxiliary imaging and laboratory methodsd |
| Susceptible tumour origin (histotype) |
| According to tumour growth kinetics as per a series of follow-up imaging (if available) |
| Limited size and number of lesions and limited number of organ sites allowing a safe and complete local ablatione |
aHere, disease-free interval is defined as the time between oligometastatic presentation and completion of previous anticancer therapy. The probability of occult metastases progressively declines with increasing disease-free intervals.
bUsually between 2 and 8 mm (corresponding to the so-called grey zone) and found in different organs, typically in the lungs.
cNot only in terms of tumour location that should allow a safe and complete ablation but also in terms of tumour type associated with a survival benefit of local ablation (e.g. colorectal cancer oligometastases in the liver or head and neck cancer oligometastases in the lungs).
dAuxiliary imaging includes for example PET/CT, particularly with new tracers such as PSMA-targeted PET/CT and auxiliary laboratory methods comprise tumour marker tests and potentially also a liquid biopsy.
eTaking also into consideration the location of lesions within a given organ site.
Fig. 1A simplified model of distant dissemination showing the difference between a true and false oligometastatic disease.
In both scenarios (a, b), cancer cell shedding starts at time t0 leading to a detectable metastatic outgrowth at time t1. Lesions of at least 8 mm in diameter appearing at time t2 are amenable to a proper diagnostic workup including radiology, nuclear medicine and pathology. However, smaller leasions (2–8 mm) are often non-specific, requiring thus follow-up. Although at time t3, an oligometastatic state can be confirmed in both scenarious radiologically, only situation A corresponds to a true oligometastatic disease because there are no non-specific micronodules in the grey zone (2–8 mm) and, more imporantly, not any unrecognised subclinical dissemination. Figure includes modified templates from Servier Medical Art.