Source: DGNews | Posted 2 years ago
Adding Cetuximab to Chemotherapy Increases Tumour Shrinkage In Advanced Colorectal Cancer
NEW YORK -- November 24, 2009 -- Adding cetuximab to neoadjuvant chemotherapy
can shrink tumours leading to increased potentially curative surgery in
patients who have colorectal cancer with inoperable metastatic liver lesions,
according to a study published online first in The Lancet Oncology.
Gunnar Folprecht, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Dresden, Germany, and
colleagues from Germany and Austria conducted the randomised Cetuximab in
Neoadjuvant Treatment of Non-Resectable Colorectal Liver Metastases (CELIM)
trial.
CELIM examined the effectiveness of adding cetuximab to neoadjuvant
chemotherapy to improve tumour response and maximise rates of potentially
curable surgery in patients with colorectal liver metastases (CLM).
A total of 109 patients were randomly assigned to treatment with cetuximab plus
oxaliplatin, fluorouracil, and folinic acid (FOLFOX6; group A) or cetuximab
plus irinotecan, fluorouracil, and folinic acid (FOLFIRI; group B).
Tumour response and suitability for surgery were assessed every 4 cycles (8
weeks) using computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Patients with resectable disease, after assessment, were offered liver surgery.
The authors also did a blinded surgical review of MRI and CT scans to provide
an objective assessment of how suitability for surgery changed during treatment.
Findings showed that treatment with cetuximab resulted in high tumour response
rates and a significant increase (28%) in the proportion of tumours that were
amenable to surgery compared with at the start of the study.
Partial or complete tumour response was shown in 68% of patients in group A and
57% of patients in group B. Tumour response was higher in patients with
KRAS wild-type tumours (70%) compared with patients with
KRAS tumour mutations (41%), consistent with results of previous
studies which have shown that this mutation confers resistance to cetuximab.
Overall, surgery was achieved in 36 of 106 patients (34%). Importantly, the
blinded review found that treatment with cetuximab significantly increased the
proportion of tumours that were amenable to surgery, with 60% (41 of 68
patients) of tumours judged to be resectable after treatment compared with 32%
(22 of 68 patients) at the start of the study.
The treatment was generally well tolerated. Grade 3 toxicity occurred in 72% of
patients, the most common toxicities being skin reactions and neutropenia.
“Our data suggest that treatment with cetuximab and chemotherapy results in
high confirmed tumour response rates...leading to…increased resectability…In
the light of recent studies in metastatic colorectal cancer the value of
further treatment intensification will be investigated.”
SOURCE: The Lancet Oncology



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